Expansion of the concept of micropapillary adenocarcinoma to include a newly recognized filigree pattern as well as the classical pattern based on 1468 stage I lung adenocarcinomas Journal Article


Authors: Emoto, K.; Eguchi, T.; Tan, K. S.; Takahashi, Y.; Aly, R. G.; Rekhtman, N.; Travis, W. D.; Adusumilli, P. S.
Article Title: Expansion of the concept of micropapillary adenocarcinoma to include a newly recognized filigree pattern as well as the classical pattern based on 1468 stage I lung adenocarcinomas
Abstract: Introduction: The classical micropapillary (MIP) pattern is defined in the 2015 WHO classification as tumor cells growing in papillary tufts forming florets that lack fibrovascular cores, and it is associated with poor prognosis. We observed a novel pattern that we termed a filigree MIP pattern and investigated its relationship with the classical MIP pattern. Methods: Filigree pattern was defined as tumor cells growing in delicate, lace-like, narrow stacks of cells without fibrovascular cores. We required at least three piled-up nuclei from the alveolar wall basal layer, with a breadth of up to three cells across. To assess the relationship of the filigree pattern with the classical MIP pattern, we documented their frequencies in the context of the clinical and pathologic characteristics of 1468 stage I invasive adenocarcinomas, including survival analysis using cumulative incidence of recurrence by competing risks. Results: We observed the filigree MIP pattern in 35% of cases. By including the filigree pattern as an MIP pattern, we identified 57 more MIP predominant cases in addition to the previously diagnosed 87 MIP predominant adenocarcinomas. These 57 cases were reclassified from papillary (n = 37), acinar (n = 16), and solid (n = 4) predominant adenocarcinoma, respectively. Of the 144 MIP predominant adenocarcinomas, the filigree predominant MIP pattern (n = 78) showed a poor prognosis like the classical predominant MIP pattern (n = 66) (p = 0.464). In addition, like the classical MIP pattern (p = 0.010), even a small amount (≥5%) of filigree MIP pattern was significantly associated with worse cumulative incidence of recurrence (p = 0.001) in multivariable analysis. Conclusion: The frequent association with the classical MIP pattern and the similar poor prognosis supports inclusion of the filigree pattern in the MIP pattern subtype. © 2019 International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer
Keywords: adenocarcinoma; recurrence; lung; micropapillary; prognosis; filigree
Journal Title: Journal of Thoracic Oncology
Volume: 14
Issue: 11
ISSN: 1556-0864
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2019-11-01
Start Page: 1948
End Page: 1961
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtho.2019.07.008
PUBMED: 31352072
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8785415
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Natasha Rekhtman
    424 Rekhtman
  2. William D Travis
    742 Travis
  3. Takashi   Eguchi
    71 Eguchi
  4. Kay See   Tan
    241 Tan
  5. Rania Gaber Aly
    30 Aly
  6. Katsura Emoto
    11 Emoto