Apocrine cystadenoma: A long-standing apocrine hidrocystoma with an adenomatous proliferation.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-1-2024
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Apocrine cystadenoma is a rare, benign adenomatous cystic neoplasm, the pathogenesis of which is not fully understood. We sought to characterize the clinical, dermatoscopic, and histopathologic features of apocrine cystadenoma and its relationship to hidrocystoma.
METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed cases of apocrine cystadenoma and hidrocystoma retrieved from the dermatopathology laboratory information system.
RESULTS: Of the 350 cases apocrine cystic lesions, 13 cases of apocrine cystadenomas met the inclusion criteria. The age ranged from 20 to 84 years with an average of 64 years. They were long-standing (duration 3-15 years), slow-growing, large tumors usually found on the scalp. Dermatoscopy accentuated translucent light to dark blue color and prominent vessels that were present more at the periphery. All lesions were multilocular with columnar to cuboidal lining and decapitation secretion. A large portion of the lesion consisted of a simple nonproliferative epithelial lining, identical to that observed in apocrine hidrocystomas, while the proliferative adenomatous component made up a smaller portion with two patterns: (1) tubular proliferation, which either protruded into the cystic cavity or expanded outward peripherally, or (2) papillary projections, which were multiple layers thick with fibrovascular core, sometimes accompanied by tubular proliferation. Immunohistochemical stains showed strong staining for p40 and a sparse number of cells stained for Ki-67 and p53.
CONCLUSIONS: The long duration of the lesion and the large areas of simple apocrine epithelial lining suggest that apocrine cystadenomas arise from long-standing apocrine hidrocystomas. However, the retrospective nature of the study from a single institution is a limitation.
Volume
51
Issue
3
First Page
251
Last Page
257
ISSN
1600-0560
Published In/Presented At
Connolly, D. M., McGeehin, E. L., & Lee, J. B. (2024). Apocrine cystadenoma: A long-standing apocrine hidrocystoma with an adenomatous proliferation. Journal of cutaneous pathology, 51(3), 251–257. https://doi.org/10.1111/cup.14573
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
38084825
Department(s)
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Document Type
Article