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Journal ArticleDOI

Mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of parotid: Is preoperative cytological diagnosis possible?

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TLDR
In this paper, the mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of parotid was detected by fine needle aspiration cytology of three cases after clinical examination and immunocytochemistry for mammoglobin and S100 were performed.
Abstract
Mammary analogue secretory carcinoma is a recently recognized tumor of salivary gland with characteristic t(12;15)(q13;q25) that results in ETV6-NTRK3 fusion product. Distinguishing mammary analogue secretory carcinoma from other salivary gland tumors is important. Present study highlights cytologic findings in three cases of mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of parotid which facilitate preoperative diagnosis with the aid of ancillary diagnostic techniques. Fine needle aspiration cytology of parotid was performed on three cases after clinical examination. Immunocytochemistry for mammoglobin and S100 were performed. Parotidectomy was done in all cases. The corresponding hematoxylin and eosin stained slides and blocks of all cases were studied. Molecular analysis was done in one of the cases. Cases 1 and 3 revealed uniform atypical epithelial cells arranged in branching papillary pattern with few cells in microcystic pattern. Case 2 showed atypical cells arranged mainly in loose clusters and few singly dissociated. Individual cells revealed round nuclei, vesicular chromatin, prominent nucleoli and abundant finely vacuolated cytoplasm with metachromasia prominent in May-Grunwald-Giemsa smear (case 3). Characteristic hob-nail cells covering papillae were observed in cases 1 and 3. Immunocytochemistry showed strong positivity for mammoglobin and S100 thereby confirming the diagnosis of mammary analogue secretory carcinoma preoperatively. The diagnosis was in concordance with surgical specimen. Also, characteristic ETV6-NTRK3 translocation was confirmed in case 1. Increased awareness and high index of suspicion is necessary for the upfront diagnosis, more so for the papillary variant of mammary analogue secretory carcinoma. Immunocytochemistry aids in confirming this preoperative diagnosis, based on which treatment can be planned. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2016;44:519-525. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic review of mammary analog secretory carcinoma of salivary glands at 7 years after description.

TL;DR: Mammary analog secretory carcinoma of the salivary glands (MASCSG) is a newly introduced malignant tumor of theSalivary gland that has been confused with acinic cell carcinoma for decades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnostic Approach to Fine Needle Aspirations of Cystic Lesions of the Salivary Gland

TL;DR: The utility of separating FNA specimens from salivary gland cysts, based upon the presence of mucin and admixed lymphocytes in cyst fluid is demonstrated and the Milan System approach for reporting in cystic salivARY gland cases is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of salivary glands: diagnostic pitfall with distinct immunohistochemical profile and molecular features

TL;DR: A series of 3 MASC cases including clinical data with follow-up for up to 26 months and FISH analysis showed translocation of the ETV6 gene locus in the majority of tumour cell nuclei, no local relapse or metastasis was detected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mammary Analogue Secretory Carcinoma (MASC) of the salivary gland: A new tumor entity

TL;DR: Mammary analogue secretory carcinoma is a recently described low-grade malignant tumor of the salivary glands, biologically and morphologically equivalent to secretory breast carcinoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Difficulty in the Cytodiagnosis of Mammary Analogue Secretory Carcinoma: Survey of 109 Cytologists with a Case Originating from a Minor Salivary Gland.

TL;DR: Difficulty in the cytodiagnosis of Mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of the salivary gland is suggested, based on a survey-based debate about its cytologic diagnosis by fine-needle aspiration and experience.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mammary analog secretory carcinoma of salivary gland origin with the ETV6 gene rearrangement by FISH: expanded morphologic and immunohistochemical spectrum of a recently described entity.

TL;DR: The finding of duct involvement, proven with an incomplete p63-positive basal layer surrounding a minority of tumor cell nests and cysts, raised the possibility of a ductal epithelial origin for MASC, and reinforce MASC as a unique low-grade salivary gland tumor entity with morphologic overlap with AciCC, MEC, and cystadenocarcinoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinicopathological characterization of mammary analogue secretory carcinoma of salivary glands.

TL;DR: Chiosea S I, Griffith C, Assaad A & Seethala R R ’(2012) Histopathology 61, 387–394.
Journal ArticleDOI

DOG1: a novel marker of salivary acinar and intercalated duct differentiation

TL;DR: DOG1 staining is a marker of salivary acinar and to a lesser extent intercalated duct differentiation and may also be a markers of a ‘transformed’ myoepithelial phenotype in a subset of biphasic Salivary gland malignancies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The profile of acinic cell carcinoma after recognition of mammary analog secretory carcinoma.

TL;DR: It appears that more than half of zymogen granule poor AciCCs are likely to represent MASC; even after excluding cases of MASC, the presence of HGT in Aci CC predicts poorer overall survival.
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