Primary pleural thymic epithelial tumours

Epidemiology

Primary pleural thymic epithelial tumours are rare. They may closely mimic mesothelioma, macroscopically, histologically and immunophenotypically.

Macroscopic appearances

The tumours are usually multinodular. They may encase the lung. There may be involvement of lung or mediastinum.

Histopathology

The histological pattern is similar to that of mediastinal thymic epithelial tumours and include the range of subtypes (A, AB, B1, B2) described in the WHO classification. The low-power lobulated appearance, organoid features, blood-filled cysts, stromal haemorrhage, perivascular oedema with free-floating lymphocytes and proteinaceous pools all favour a diagnosis of thymoma.

Immunohistochemistry (with mediastinal thymomas for comparison)

 

epithelial component

primary pleural

mediastinal

AE1/3

8/81

20/201

CK5/6

8/81

20/201

Calretinin

1/8 (stromal component positive in 7/8)

0/20 (stromal component positive in 7/20)1

Thrombomodulin

1/81

3/201

EMA

0/81

 

CEA

0/81

 

CD34

0/81

 

CD20

7/81

 

 

 

 

lymphoid component

CD1a

5/81

CD3

8/81

CD20

8/81

CD99

5/81

TdT

5/81

 

 

Differential diagnosis

The presence of immature T-cells (CD1a+/CD2+/CD99+/TdT+) favour thymoma.

References

1Attanoos, R.L., Galateau-Salle, F., Gibbs, A.R., Muller, S., Ghandour, F. and Dojcinov, S.D. Primary thymic epithelial tumours of the pleura mimicking malignant mesothelioma. Histopathology 2002;41:42-9.

This page last revised 2.1.2003.

©SMUHT/PW Bishop