Here are some examples of classical conditions, organised according to categories in The Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytology.
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Milan Category: Classical cases
Non-neoplastic
Normal
Sialadenitis
Benign Neoplasm
Pleomorphic Adenoma
Warthin Tumour
Oncocytoma
Malignant
Acinic Cell Carcinoma
Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma
Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma
Salivary Duct Carcinoma
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Non-neoplastic entities
Normal salivary gland
- Aspiration usually in microfragments of tissue.
- Acinar cells forming grape-like clusters display an eccentric small round nuclei with indistinct nucleoli and abundant vacuolated cytoplasm.
- Flat cohesive sheet of tubule of ductal cells display uniform, small cuboidal cells with round or oval nuclei and dense, sometimes squamoid, cytoplasm.
- Fibrovascular stroma holding acinar and ductal cells together.
- Adipose tissue can be seen.
- Scattered bared acinar cell nuclei may mimic lymphocytes derives from intraparotid or adjacent lymph nodes.
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Acute Sialadenitis
- Aspirated material may be grossly purulent.
- Varying numbers of neutrophils seen.
- Small sheets of ductal cells admixed with fibrin, +/- background of necrotic debris.
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Benign Neoplasm
Pleomorphic adenoma (PA)
- Epithelial cells ‘blend’ into stroma, becoming more spindled within the stroma.
- Myoepithelial cells can appear in several forms: epithelioid, plasmacytoid and spindle-shaped and are commonly found within the metachromatic fibrillary stroma which stained intensely red to purple with Romanowsky stains.
- Plasmacytoid cells may also be seen singly dispersed in the background.
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Warthin Tumour
- Aspiration may yield cyst fluid.
- Flat cohesive monolayered sheets of oncocytes displaying round to oval, centrallu placed nuclei with bland chromatin and inconspicuous nucleoli and abundant densely granular cytoplasm which are orangeophilic.
- Mixed population of background lymphocytes, mainly mature lymphocytes.
- Amorphous and granular debris present in the background
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Oncocytoma
- Cohesive, multilayered aggregates of oncocytes displaying round to oval, central placed nuclei with bland chromatin and inconspicuous nucleoli and abundant densely granular cytoplasm which is orangeophilic. Sometimes a nested architecture is discernible, unlike the flatter monolayered sheets seen in Warthin tumour.
- Scattered bare nuclei may be present.
- Absence of cyst debris and lymphocytes (both often present in Warthin tumour).
- Oncocytoma vs nodular oncocytosis is difficult to distinguish with radiologic correlation.
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Malignant
Acinic Cell Carcinoma
- Large branching tissue fragments with central vessels.
- Polygonal neoplastic cells forming vague acinar structures.
- The nuclei are usually round and fairly bland, sometimes with prominent nucleoli.
- Cytoplasm is abundant and granular or vacuolated.
- Bared round nuclei may be seen in the background.
- DDx: Normal salivary gland parenchyma – Tighter, well-formed grape-like clusters; some lobules may also feature ductal cells; may also have adipose stroma (which is not seen in Acinic cell carcinoma).
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Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma
- Three variants: Tubular, cribriform and solid.
- May present in combination.
- Abundant acellular matrix which stains intensely metachromatic with Romanowsky stain while nearly invisible on Papanicolaou stain.
- Matrix/stroma is arranged in discrete, large globules with sharp borders and sometimes as cylinders.
- The cells are basaloid and uniform with oval to angulated, hyperchromatic nuclei and scant cytoplasm.
- Cells often surround balls of matrix.
- Sometimes bare oval nuclei are seen in the background.
- Rarely, nucleoli, mitoses and necrosis may be observed in high-grade tumours.
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Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma
- Three cell types:
- Mucin-secreting cells: Eccentric nuclear with vacuolated cytoplasm which can be mistaken as histiocytes.
- Epidermoid cells: Polygonal and squamoid with dense cytoplasm.
- Intermediate cells: May have an immature squamous metaplasia-like appearance; or may exhibit relatively high N/C ratios.
- Low-grade MECs are commonly cystic with abundant extracellular mucin and a predominance of mucin-secreting cells showing bland nuclear features.
- Because of the hypocellular nature and bland nuclei, low-grade MEC may be categorised as AUS or suspicious for malignancy, if there are insufficient definitive features for malignancy.
- DDx: Mucous retention cysts with squamous/mucinous metaplasia; Benign neoplasms with metaplastic changes.
- High-grade MECs have a predominance of epidermoid cells with marked cytologic atypia, and may not be recognised specifically as MEC.
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Salivary Duct Carcinoma
- High grade malignant cells occurring in clusters and singly.
- The cells exhibit large nuclei and abundant cytoplasm.
- Necrosis in the background.