Cribriform-Morular Thyroid Carcinoma Is a Distinct Thyroid Malignancy of Uncertain Cytogenesis.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Tumors with papillary cribriform and morular architecture were initially considered to be variants of papillary thyroid carcinoma; however, recent observations have challenged this view. In this study, we reviewed the demographical, histopathological, and immunohistochemical features of the largest case series, consisting of 33 tumors. The age at time of pathological diagnosis ranged from 18 to 59 (mean 33) years, and all patients except one were female. Sixteen patients had multifocal and fifteen had unifocal disease. The status of focality was unavailable in two patients. Tumors were well-circumscribed, ranging in size from 0.1 to 8.0 cm. The cribriform component was admixed with morulae in the majority, except seven had a cribriform-predominant architecture and two had predominantly solid growth. Variable degrees of nuclear enlargement, elongation, overlapping, and grooves were seen but florid nuclear convolution, intranuclear pseudoinclusions, and optically clear nuclei due to chromatin margination were not appreciated. There was no or little colloid material within the cribriform spaces. Two solid tumors had high-grade features. Immunohistochemical studies showed beta-catenin nuclear and cytoplasmic positivity in all cases. The cribriform component was positive for TTF1 and negative for thyroglobulin. PAX8 was absent in half of these tumors and focal in the remainder. Morulae were positive for keratin 5 and CD5 and negative for p63, p40, TTF1, and PAX8. Molecular studies revealed germline APC mutations in 12 tumors and were negative in 5 sporadic tumors in a subset of tested tumors. Irrespective of the antibody used in this cohort, all cribriform-morular carcinomas express TTF1; however, PAX8 immunoreactivity is weak, focal or negative, and all tumors lack thyroglobulin reactivity; these findings raise questions about tumor cell origin and may indicate that these are not of thyroid follicular epithelial differentiation. We postulate that morulae may represent divergent thymic/ultimobranchial pouch-related differentiation. Given their unique cytomorphology, immunohistochemical profiles, and genetic features that have little overlap with traditional follicular cell-derived thyroid carcinomas, we propose that these tumors represent a distinct form of thyroid carcinoma unrelated to other neoplasms of thyroid follicular cells.