Table 2 |
||
|
Histopathologic features of epithelial mucinous tumors of appendiceal, colonic, and small bowel origin are designated as disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis (DPAM) and peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis (PMCA). |
||
| Features |
DPAM |
PMCA |
|
|
||
| Primary site |
Appendix |
Appendix, colon, small intestine |
| Primary diagnosis |
Mucinous adenoma usually in a mucocoele |
Mucinous adenocarcinoma |
| Surgical appearance |
Mucinous tumors and mucinous ascites with redistribution |
Carcinomatosis with variable amounts of mucinous ascites, redistribution is prominent with large volume of ascites |
| Peritoneal tumor |
||
| • Cellularity |
Scant |
Moderate to abundant |
| • Morphology |
Abundant extracellular mucin containing simple to focally proliferative mucinous epithelium. There is a single layer of cells |
Moderate to abundant extracellular mucin containing extensively proliferative mucinous epithelium or mucinous glands, clusters of cells, or individual cells consistent with carcinoma |
| • Cytologic atypia |
Minimal |
Moderate to marked |
| • Mitotic activity |
Rare |
Infrequent to frequent |
|
|
||
| Lymph node involvement |
Almost never |
Moderate |
|
|
||
| Liver metastases |
Almost never |
Very infrequent |
|
|
||
| Parenchymal organ invasion |
Rare (except ovary) |
Frequent |
|
Hybrid type tumors show less than 5% of PMCA within DPAM. Mucinous carcinomas are divided into three grades by maintenance or loss of glandular architecture. | ||
Harmon and Sugarbaker International Seminars in Surgical Oncology 2005 2:3 doi:10.1186/1477-7800-2-3 |
||