Lung mass differential diagnosis

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Maria Fernanda Villarreal, M.D. [2], Eiman Ghaffarpasand, M.D. [3]

Overview

Lung mass can be differentiated from other conditions that cause chronic cough, hemoptysis, and weight loss based on the clinical features, laboratory findings, imaging features, histological features, and genetic studies.

Differentiating Lung Mass from other Diseases

Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Benign Papilloma[4] Squamous cell papilloma
  • Endobronchial
  • Cauliflower-like lesions
  • Tan-white soft to semifirm protrusions
  • N/A
  • N/A
Glandular papilloma
  • Endobronchial
  • White to tan endobronchial polyps that measure from 0.7-1.5 cm
  • N/A
  • N/A
Adenoma[5] Alveolar adenoma
  • 0.7 - 6.0 cm
  • Well demarcated smooth
  • Lobulated, multicystic
  • Soft to firm
  • Pale yellow to tan cut surfaces
  • N/A
Papillary adenoma[6]
  • Bronchioloalveolar cell
  • Well defined
  • Encapsulated
  • Soft, spongy to firm mass
  • Granular gray white/ brown
  • 1.0- 4.0 cm
  • Incidental finding
  • N/A
Mucinous cystadenoma
  • Central
  • White-pink to tan
  • Smooth and shiny tumors
  • Gelatinous mucoid solid core
  • 0.7 - 7.5 cm
  • N/A
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC)[7] Papillary
  • Central
  • Exophytic
  • Intra-epithelial
  • Without invasion
Clear cell
Basaloid
  • Peripheral palisading of nuclei
  • Poor differentiation
Small cell carcinoma[8]
  • Bronchial precursor cell
  • Peripheral
  • White-tan, soft, friable perihilar masses
  • Extensive necrosis
  • 5% peripheral coin lesions
  • Sheet-like growth
  • Nesting
  • Trabeculae
  • Peripheral palisading
  • Rosette formation
  • High mitotic rate
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Adenocarcinoma[9][10][11] Acinar adenocarcinoma
  • Columnar cells of bronchioles
  • Peripheral
  • Single or multiple lesions
  • Different in size
  • Peripheral distribution
  • Gray-white central fibrosis
  • Pleural puckering
  • Anthracotic pigmentation
  • Lobulated or ill-defined edges
  • Irregular-shaped glands
  • Malignant cells:
    • Hyperchromatic nuclei
    • Fibroblastic stroma
  • Peripheral nodules under 4.0 cm in size
  • Central location as a hilar or perihilar mass
  • Rarely show cavitations
  • Hilar adenopathy
  • Adenocarcinomas account for the majority of small peripheral cancers identified radiologically
Aerogenous spread is characteristic
Papillary adenocarcinoma
Bronchio-alveolar carcinoma Non-mucinous
Mucinous
  • Low grade differentiation
  • Composed of:
  • Cytologic atypia
Mixed non-mucinous and mucinous or indeterminate
  • Mixed type of cells
  • Low to high grade differentiated cells
Solid adenocarcinoma with mucin production Fetal adenocarcinoma
Mucinous (“colloid”) carcinoma
Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma
Signet ring adenocarcinoma
  • Focal
  • Cells with nuclei displaced to sides
  • Components of other cells are present
Clear cell adenocarcinoma
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Large cell carcinoma[12] Basaloid large cell carcinoma of the lung
  • Approximately 10% of lung cancers
  • Smoking
  • Invasive growth pattern
  • Peripheral palisading
  • Small, monomorphic, cuboidal fusiform
  • Large, peripheral masses
Clear cell carcinoma of the lung
Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma of the lung
Large-cell lung carcinoma with rhabdoid phenotype
Mixed type
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Sarcomatoid carcinoma[13] Carcinosarcoma
  • Central or peripheral
  • Upper lobes
  • No specific imaging features 
Spindle cell carcinoma
  • Only spindle shaped tumor cells
  • Lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates
Giant cell carcinoma
Pleomorphic carcinoma
Pulmonary blastoma
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Carcinoid tumor[14] Typical carcinoid

Atypical carcinoid

  • Most common in males
  • Mean age of diagnosis 45
  • Typical carcinoids are throughout the lungs
  • Atypical carcinoid is more commonly peripheral
  • Firm, well demarcated, tan to yellow tumors
  • Uniform polygonal cells
  • Nuclear atypia
  • Pleomorphism
  • The most common patterns are the organoid and trabecular
  • Highly vascularized fibrovascular stroma
  • Focal necrosis
Salivary gland tumors[15] Mucoepidermoid carcinoma
  • Most patients presents in the third and fourth decade
  • Constitutes of less than 1% tumor
  • No association with cigarette smoking or other risk factors
  • Primitive cells of tracheobronchial origin
  • Bronchial glands
  • Ranging in size from 0.5-6 cm
  • Soft, polypoid, and pink-tan in colour
  • High-grade lesions are infiltrative
  • Well-circumscribed oval or lobulated mass
  • Calcifications
  • Post-obstructive pneumonic infiltrates
Adenoid cystic carcinoma
  • Constitutes less than 1% of all lung tumors
  • Most commonly seen in fourth and fifth decades of life
  • Primitive cells of tracheobronchial origin
  • Gray-white or tan polypoid lesions
  • Size ranges from 1–4 cm
  • Infiltrative margins
  • Invades other cell layers
  • Heterogeneous cellularity
  • Cribriform pattern
  • Perineural invasion
  • Well circumscribed
  • Nodule
Epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma
  • Age ranges from 33 to 71 years
  • No association with smoking
  • Endobronchial
  • Solid to gelatinous in texture
  • White to gray in colour
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Preinvasive lesions[16] Squamous carcinoma in situ
  • Most commonly seen in fifth or sixth decades
  • Mostly seen in women
  • Basal cells of squamous epithelium
  • Focal or multi-focal plaque-like greyish lesions
  • Nonspecific erythema
  • Even nodular or polypoid lesions
  • Cauliflower like
  • Mosaic pattern
Atypical adenomatous hyperplasia
  • Multiple grey to yellow foci
  • 1mm to 10mm in size
  • Typically not visualized on radiographs
  • Small non-solid nodules
  • Ground-glass opacity
Diffuse idiopathic pulmonary neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia
  • Endobronchial
  • Early lesions are:
    • Small, gray-white nodules, resembling "miliary bodies"
  • Larger carcinoid tumors are:
    • Firm
    • Homogeneous
    • Well-defined
    • Grey or yellow-white masses
  • Mosaic pattern of air trapping
  • Sometimes with nodules
  • Thickened bronchial and bronchiolar walls
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Mesenchymal tumors[17] Epithelioid haemangioendothelioma / Angiosarcoma
  • Caucasian
  • 80% are women
  • Endothelial cells
  • 0.3-2.0 cm circumscribed mass
  • Gray-white or gray-tan firm tissue
  • Yellow flecks
  • Central calcifications
  • Cut surface has a cartilaginous consistency
Pleuropulmonary blastoma
  • Most common in children
  • Median age of diagnosis is 2 years
  • Purely cystic
  • Thin-walled
  • Rarely solid
  • Firm to gelatinous
  • Upto 15 cm
  • Unilateral
  • Localized airfilled cysts
  • Septal thickening or an intracystic mass
Chondroma
  • Young women
  • Capsulated lobules
  • Hypocellular
  • Features of malignancy are absent
  • N/A
  • Multiple
  • Well circumscribed lesions
  • “Pop-corn” calcifications
Congenital peribronchial myofibroblastic tumor
  • 5-10 cm
  • Well-circumscribed
  • Non-encapsulated
  • Smooth or multinodular surface
  • The cut surface has a tann-grey to yellow-tan fleshy appearance
  • Hemorrhage
  • Necrosis
  • Well circumscribed
  • Opaque hemithorax
  • Heterogeneous mass
  • Rare
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis
Malignant Mesenchymal tumors[17] Diffuse pulmonary lymphangiomatosis
  • Children
  • Young adults of both sexes
  • Prominence of the bronchovascular bundles along
  • Anastomosing endothelial-lined cells along lymphatic routes
  • Spindle cells
  • Intra alveolar siderophages
  • Increased interstitial markings
  • Thickening of the:
  • Skin
  • Bone
Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor
  • Solitary
  • Round rubbery masses
  • Yellowish-gray discoloration
  • Average size of 3.0 cm
  • Non-encapculated
  • Calcifications
  • No local invasion
  • Solitary mass
  • Regular borders
  • Spiculated appearance
  • Accompanied by
  • Rare
Pulmonary artery sarcoma
  • Mucoid or gelatinous clots filling vascular lumens
  • The cut surface may show
    • Firm fibrotic areas
    • Bony/gritty or chondromyxoid foci
    • Hemorrhage and necrosis are common in high-grade tumors
  • Spindle cells in
    • A myxoid background
    • Collagenized stroma
    • Recanalized thrombi
Pulmonary vein sarcoma
  • Most common in women
  • Mean age of diagnosis is 49
  • Fleshy-tan tumor
  • Can occlude the lumen of the involved vessel
  • 3.0- 20.0 cm
  • Invasion of wall of the vein
  • N/A
Type Category Disease Epidemiology Pleuripotent cells Location Gross pathology Histology Immunohistochemistry Imaging Metastasis

References

  1. Erasmus JJ, Connolly JE, McAdams HP, Roggli VL (2000). "Solitary pulmonary nodules: Part I. Morphologic evaluation for differentiation of benign and malignant lesions". Radiographics. 20 (1): 43–58. doi:10.1148/radiographics.20.1.g00ja0343. PMID 10682770.
  2. Gümüştaş S, Inan N, Akansel G, Ciftçi E, Demirci A, Ozkara SK (June 2012). "Differentiation of malignant and benign lung lesions with diffusion-weighted MR imaging". Radiol Oncol. 46 (2): 106–13. doi:10.2478/v10019-012-0021-3. PMC 3472932. PMID 23077446.
  3. Kelley LC, Puette M, Langheinrich KA, King B (November 1994). "Bovine pulmonary blastomas: histomorphologic description and immunohistochemistry". Vet. Pathol. 31 (6): 658–62. doi:10.1177/030098589403100605. PMID 7863581.
  4. Maxwell RJ, Gibbons JR, O'Hara MD (January 1985). "Solitary squamous papilloma of the bronchus". Thorax. 40 (1): 68–71. PMC 459982. PMID 3969658.
  5. Shiota Y, Matsumoto H, Sasaki N, Taniyama K, Hashimoto S, Sueishi K (1998). "Solitary bronchioloalveolar adenoma of the lung". Respiration. 65 (6): 483–5. doi:10.1159/000029319. PMID 9817965.
  6. Kanchustambham V, Saladi S, Patolia S, Mahmoud Assaf S, Stoeckel D (March 2017). "A Rare Case of a Benign Primary Pleomorphic Adenoma of the Lung". Cureus. 9 (3): e1069. doi:10.7759/cureus.1069. PMC 5375953. PMID 28409070.
  7. Roth E, Smidt D (January 1970). "[Studies on early ejaculate collection using electroejaculation in German improved land-swines and Goettinger miniature pigs]". Berl. Munch. Tierarztl. Wochenschr. (in German). 83 (1): 7–11. PMID 5528918.
  8. Jackman DM, Johnson BE (2005). "Small-cell lung cancer". Lancet. 366 (9494): 1385–96. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67569-1. PMID 16226617.
  9. Mitchell, Richard Sheppard; Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K.; Fausto, Nelson. "Chapter 13, box on morphology of adenocarcinoma". Robbins Basic Pathology (8th ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 1-4160-2973-7.
  10. Soda M, Choi YL, Enomoto M, Takada S, Yamashita Y, Ishikawa S; et al. (2007). "Identification of the transforming EML4-ALK fusion gene in non-small-cell lung cancer". Nature. 448 (7153): 561–6. doi:10.1038/nature05945. PMID 17625570.
  11. Adenocarcinoma of the lung. Librepathology 2015. http://librepathology.org/wiki/index.php/File:Adenocarcinoma_%283950819000%29.jpg
  12. Rossi G, Mengoli MC, Cavazza A, Nicoli D, Barbareschi M, Cantaloni C, Papotti M, Tironi A, Graziano P, Paci M, Stefani A, Migaldi M, Sartori G, Pelosi G (January 2014). "Large cell carcinoma of the lung: clinically oriented classification integrating immunohistochemistry and molecular biology". Virchows Arch. 464 (1): 61–8. doi:10.1007/s00428-013-1501-6. PMID 24221342.
  13. Huang SY, Shen SJ, Li XY (October 2013). "Pulmonary sarcomatoid carcinoma: a clinicopathologic study and prognostic analysis of 51 cases". World J Surg Oncol. 11: 252. doi:10.1186/1477-7819-11-252. PMC 3850921. PMID 24088577.
  14. Dahabreh J, Stathopoulos GP, Koutantos J, Rigatos S (March 2009). "Lung carcinoid tumor biology: treatment and survival". Oncol. Rep. 21 (3): 757–60. PMID 19212636.
  15. Elnayal A, Moran CA, Fox PS, Mawlawi O, Swisher SG, Marom EM (July 2013). "Primary salivary gland-type lung cancer: imaging and clinical predictors of outcome". AJR Am J Roentgenol. 201 (1): W57–63. doi:10.2214/AJR.12.9579. PMC 3767141. PMID 23789697.
  16. Greenberg AK, Yee H, Rom WN (2002). "Preneoplastic lesions of the lung". Respir. Res. 3: 20. PMC 107849. PMID 11980589.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Koenigkam-Santos M, Sommer G, Puderbach M, Safi S, Schnabel PA, Kauczor HU, Heussel CP (April 2014). "Primary intrathoracic malignant mesenchymal tumours: computed tomography features of a rare group of chest neoplasms". Insights Imaging. 5 (2): 237–44. doi:10.1007/s13244-013-0306-0. PMC 3999366. PMID 24407922.