Morphologic criteria for the diagnosis of prostatic adenocarcinoma in needle biopsy specimens. A study of 250 consecutive cases in a routine surgical pathology practice.

CONTEXT The diagnosis of prostate adenocarcinoma in needle core biopsy specimens is based on multiple diagnostic criteria and supportive features, most of which have been defined mainly from observations in transurethral resection and prostatectomy specimens. There is little information on the frequency with which diagnostic and supportive features of prostate cancer occur within benign glands. The few reports dealing with diagnostic criteria of cancer in needle biopsies have been largely confined to analysis of selected cases that posed particular diagnostic difficulty. OBJECTIVE To analyze the frequency with which numerous diagnostic or supportive features of prostate cancer occur in an unselected, consecutively performed series of 18-gauge prostate needle biopsy specimens. DESIGN Two hundred fifty consecutive 18-gauge prostate needle biopsy specimens (150 malignant and 100 benign) were evaluated, using hematoxylin-eosin-stained histologic sections. RESULTS The frequency of the histologic features in malignant and benign glands was as follows: prominent nucleoli (94% and 25% of malignant and benign specimens, respectively), marginated nucleoli (88% and 7%), multiple nucleoli (64% and 0%), blue-tinged mucinous secretions (52% and 0%), intraluminal crystalloids (40.6% and 1%), intraluminal amorphous eosinophilic material (86.7% and 2%), collagenous micronodules (2% and 0%), glomerulations (15.3% and 0%), perineural invasion (22% and 0%), retraction clefting (38.6% and 7%), and invasion of fat (0.7% and 0%). CONCLUSIONS Since not all diagnostic or supportive features of cancer are evident in any single case of cancer, particularly in needle biopsy specimens in which sampling is limited, awareness of these data would be helpful in the assessment of small foci of atypical glands being considered for cancer.

[1]  E. Sproul,et al.  Microscopic differential diagnosis of latent carcinoma of prostate. , 1953, A.M.A. archives of pathology.

[2]  R. Scott,et al.  Carcinoma of the prostate. A survey of 5,000 autopsies , 1963, Cancer.

[3]  L. M. Franks,et al.  Mucin in the prostate: A histochemical study in normal glands, latent, clinical, and colloid cancers , 1964, Cancer.

[4]  E. Holmes Crystalloids of prostatic carcinoma: Relationship to bence‐jones crystals , 1977, Cancer.

[5]  W. A. Gardner,et al.  Prostatic crystalloids: Association with adenocarcinoma , 1980, The Prostate.

[6]  P. Carstens Perineural glands in normal and hyperplastic prostates. , 1980, The Journal of urology.

[7]  N. Ordóñez,et al.  Intraluminal crystalloids in prostatic adenocarcinoma immunohistochemical, electron microscopic, and X‐ray microanalytic studies , 1986, Cancer.

[8]  D. Grignon,et al.  Mucin in prostatic adenocarcinoma. , 1988, Seminars in diagnostic pathology.

[9]  B. Helpap Observations on the number, size and localization of nucleoli in hyperplastic and neoplastic prostatic disease , 1988, Histopathology.

[10]  D. Grignon,et al.  Basal cell hyperplasia, adenoid basal cell tumor, and adenoid cystic carcinoma of the prostate gland: an immunohistochemical study. , 1988, Human pathology.

[11]  D. Grignon,et al.  Intraluminal crystalloids in whole‐organ sections of prostate , 1988, The Prostate.

[12]  P. Kelemen,et al.  Nucleolar prominence as a diagnostic variable in prostatic carcinoma , 1990, Cancer.

[13]  T. Stamey,et al.  Mucinous differentiation in prostatic adenocarcinoma. , 1991, Human pathology.

[14]  D. Grignon,et al.  Sclerosing Adenosis of the Prostate Gland: A Lesion Showing Myoepithelial Differentiation , 1992, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[15]  J. Epstein,et al.  Acidic mucin in the prostate: can it differentiate adenosis from adenocarcinoma? , 1992, Human pathology.

[16]  D. Grignon,et al.  Mucinous Metaplasia in the Prostate Gland , 1993, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[17]  P. Walsh,et al.  Relationship Between Perineural Tumor Invasion on Needle Biopsy and Radical Prostatectomy Capsular Penetration in Clinical Stage B Adenocarcinoma of the Prostate , 1993, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[18]  J. Epstein,et al.  Nucleoli in low-grade prostate adenocarcinoma and adenosis. , 1993, Human pathology.

[19]  J. Epstein,et al.  Adenosis of the Prostate Histologic Features in Transurethral Resection Specimens , 1994, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[20]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Mucin expression in atypical adenomatous hyperplasia of the prostate. , 1995, Human pathology.

[21]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Collagenous micronodules in prostate cancer. A specific but infrequent diagnostic finding. , 1995, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[22]  J. Epstein,et al.  Adenosis of the prostate. Histologic features in needle biopsy specimens. , 1995, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[23]  J. Epstein,et al.  Diagnostic criteria of limited adenocarcinoma of the prostate on needle biopsy. , 1995, Human pathology.

[24]  J. Epstein,et al.  Prostatic carcinoma with abundant xanthomatous cytoplasm. Foamy gland carcinoma. , 1996, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[25]  J. Cheville,et al.  The focus of "atypical glands, suspicious for malignancy" in prostatic needle biopsy specimens: incidence, histologic features, and clinical follow-up of cases diagnosed in a community practice. , 1997, American journal of clinical pathology.

[26]  D. Bostwick Evaluating prostate needle biopsy: Therapeutic and prognostic importance , 1997, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[27]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Prostatic adenocarcinoma with atrophic features: malignancy mimicking a benign process. , 1997, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[28]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Atypical small acinar proliferation suspicious for malignancy in prostate needle biopsies: clinical significance in 33 cases. , 1997, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[29]  P. Humphrey,et al.  The significance of intraluminal crystalloids in benign prostatic glands on needle biopsy. , 1997, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[30]  P. Humphrey,et al.  Minimal carcinoma in prostate needle biopsy specimens: diagnostic features and radical prostatectomy follow-up. , 1998, Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc.

[31]  T. Wheeler,et al.  The significance of intraluminal prostatic crystalloids in benign needle biopsies. , 1998, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[32]  M. Kattan,et al.  The association of selected pathological features with prostate cancer in a single-needle biopsy accession. , 1998, Human pathology.

[33]  R. Cohen,et al.  INTRAPROSTATIC FAT. AUTHORS' REPLY , 1998 .

[34]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Prostatic adenocarcinoma with glomeruloid features. , 1998, Human pathology.

[35]  J. Srigley,et al.  Postatrophic hyperplasia of the prostate gland: a detailed analysis of its morphology in needle biopsy specimens. , 1999, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[36]  D. Brat,et al.  How often are diagnostic features missed with less extensive histologic sampling of prostate needle biopsy specimens? , 1999, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[37]  J. Epstein,et al.  Perineural invasion, mucinous fibroplasia, and glomerulations: diagnostic features of limited cancer on prostate needle biopsy. , 1999, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[38]  D. Bostwick,et al.  Criteria for biopsy diagnosis of minimal volume prostatic adenocarcinoma: analytic comparison with nondiagnostic but suspicious atypical small acinar proliferation. , 2009, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.