Vulvar Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Non neoplastic disorders

A
  • Ectopic mammary tissue

Inflammatory diseases

  • Syphilis
  • Granuloma inquinale
  • Lymphogranuloma venereum
  • Crohn’s disease
  • Behcet’s disease
  • Necrotizing fasciitis
  • Vulvar vestibulitis
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2
Q

Syphilis

A
  • Chancre composed of plasma cells, lymphocytes and histiocytes
  • Covered by a zone of ulceration infiltrated by neutrophils and necrotic debris
  • Endarteritis: inflammation of arteries
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3
Q

Granuloma inquinale

A
  • Chronic infection caused by Calymmatobacterium granulomatis
  • Begins as soft elevated granulomatous area which enlarges slowly by peripheral extension and ulcerates
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4
Q

Granuloma inquinale histology

A
  • Dense stromal infiltrate composed of histiocytes and plasma cells
  • Scatterd small abscesses
  • Donovan’s bodies: small round encapsulated bodies within the cytoplasm of histiocytes
  • May spread retroperitoneum and stimulate a soft tissue neoplasm
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5
Q

Lymphogranuloma venereum

A
  • Caused by Chlamydia organism
  • Affects lymph vessels and lymphoid tissue
  • May have a small ulcer at the stie early
  • Swelling of inguinal lymph nodes w/ stellate abscesses surrounded by pale epitheloid cells
  • Scarring w/ fistulas and strictures of the vagina, urethra and rectum
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6
Q

Crohn’s disease

A
  • Assoc. w/ perineal disease and fistula formation
  • Erythematous areas w/ ulceration
  • May have noncaseating granulomas
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7
Q

Behcet’s disease

A
  • Autoimmune disease
  • Vasculitis often involving the mucous membranes
  • May have ocular problems
  • Rare in vulva
  • May present as nonspecific ulceration
  • No cure, treatment focused on controlling symptoms
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8
Q

Necrotizing fasciitis

A
  • May be seen in diabetic women
  • Assoc. w/ a high mortality rate
  • Wide excision is the treatment of choice
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9
Q

Vulvar vestibulitis

A
  • Chronic inflammatory infiltrate
  • Involves the lamina propria and periglandular connective tissue of the vestibular region
  • Small glands in vestibule
  • Can be inflamed
  • Can produce severe pinpoint pain in vestibule
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10
Q

Bartholin cyst

A
  • Acute infection of Bartholin gland
  • Produces acute inflammation
  • Often assoc. w/ gonorrhea
  • May cause abscesses
  • Relatively common
  • May become large 3-5cm
  • Lined by transitional epithelium or squamous metaplasia
  • Produce pain and discomfort
  • Can be excised
  • Cancer can occur and are mostly squamous cell ca
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11
Q

Non neoplastic epithelial disorders

A
  • Lichen sclerosis
  • Squamous cell hyperplasia AKA Lichen simplex chronicus
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12
Q

Lichen Sclerosis

A
  • Atrophy of the epidermis w/ elimination of rete pegs
  • Hydropic change of basal cells
  • Replacement of dermis by dense collagen and just above that bandlike lymphocytic infiltrate
  • Grossly presents as a white parchment-like patches
  • Can occur at all ages
  • Most common in postmenopausal pts
  • May mimic sexual assault
  • Assoc. w/ greater then expected risk of squamous cell carcinoma when assoc. w/ genetic alterations
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13
Q

Squamous cell hyperplasia

A
  • Caused by rubbing from pruritus
  • Acanthosis and hyperkeratosis of vulvar epithelium
  • May show increased mitotic activity
  • Variable leukocytic infiltration of dermis
  • Sometimes assoc. w/ ca
  • May be caused by infections, chemical exposure, something that causes itching
  • Biopsy to look for cellular differentiation and nuclear atypia
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14
Q

Glandular neoplastic lesions

A
  • Hidradenoma papilliferum
  • Extramammary Paget Disease
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15
Q

Hidradenoma Papilliferum

A
  • Benign tumor presents as a well circumscribed nodule covered w/ normal skin
  • Identical to intraductal papillomas of breast
  • May arise from ectopoic breast tissue
  • May ulcerate and mimic carcinoma
  • Microscopically has a complex papillary structure w/ a myoepithelial layer
  • May have some degree of pleomorphism
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16
Q

Extramammary Paget Disease

A
  • Pruritic, crusted sharply demarcated area
  • Usually on labia majora
  • May have palpable submucosal thickening
  • Paget cells: arise from primitive epithelium, have a clear halo
  • May persist for years w/o invasion
  • Can mimic a lot of things, melanoma being one of them
17
Q

Benign Exophytic Lesions

A
  • Condyloma Acuminatum
18
Q

Condyloma Acuminata

A
  • Sexually transmitted
  • Caused by HPV 6 and 11
  • Benign
  • Usually multiple and may coalesce
  • Branchlike projections of squamous epithelium w/ a fibrous stroma
  • Like many other wort-like processes it is assoc. w/ koilocytosis (perinuclear halo)
  • Frequently regresses spontaneously
  • Not a precancerous lesion
  • Marker for STD
19
Q

Squamous neoplastic lesions

A
  • Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia
  • Vulvar carcinoma: invasive, microinvasive and verrucous carcinoma
20
Q

Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasm (classic type)

A
  • Assoc. w/ high risk HPV
  • Characterized by nuclear atypia, increased mitoses
  • Grossly presents as white or pigmented plaques
  • Often multicentric
  • 90% of VIN contains HPV 16 and 18
  • Lack of surface differentiatons
21
Q

Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasm (differentiated variant)

A
  • Assoc. w/ squamous cell hyperplasia and lichen sclerosis
  • Not typically assoc. w/ HPV
  • P53 overexpression
  • Cancer may develop quickly as nodule in a background of inflammation
  • Invasive form has keratinization
22
Q

Vulvar Cancer

A
  • Squamous cell cancer makes up 95% of vulvar cancer
  • Differentiated and Classic type
  • Age at presentation 60-74
  • Mostly in labia majora
  • Tumors of labia metastasize to lymph nodes
  • Tumors of clitoris metastasize directly to deep lymph nodes
23
Q

Vulvar Cancer Risk Factors

A
  • Number of lifetime sex partners, cigarette smoking, and immunodeficiency
24
Q

Vulvar Cancer Differentiated type

A
  • Older women, not assoc. w/ HPV, keratinizing
25
Q

Vulvar Cancer Classic type

A
  • Younger women, assoc. w/ HPV often w/ a warty histology
26
Q

Vulvar Cancer Prognosis and Prognostic Factors

A
  • Prognosis: 5 year survival 50-75%
  • Prognostic factors: tumor diameter, LN status and depth of invasion
27
Q

Microinvasive Vulvar Cancer

A
  • Vulvar Ca w/ depth of penetration less than 5mm
  • Often have low incidence of LN metastasis
  • Presence of eosinophils in VIN may be a clue to early invasion
28
Q

Verrucous Carcinoma

A
  • Type of squamous carcinoma
  • May be large, exophytic and infiltrates locally
  • Mets are almost non existent
  • Can mimic condyloma acuminata and conventional squamous cell carcinoma
  • Does not have cytologic atypia and or a clearly infiltrative pattern of growth like that seen in conventional squamous cell carcinoma
29
Q

Aggressive angiomyxoma

A
  • Mimics a Bartholin gland cyst
  • Most women are in 2nd or 3rd decade of life
  • Grossly edematous ill defined mass

*soft, gelatinous, encapsulated

  • Hypocellular stroma w/ little atypia or mitotic activity w/ large blood vessels
  • Recurrence is common
30
Q

Aggressive angiomyxoma Histology

A
31
Q

Melanoma

A
  • Occurs especially in labia majora
  • 2nd most common malignant tumor of vulva
  • Most pts are >50
  • Most lesions are advanced by time of diagnosis
  • LN status, depth of penetration, and ulceration are prognostic factors
  • 5 year survival ~35%
32
Q

Page disease vs Melanoma

A
  • Paget: pos. for PAS, keratin, mucicarmine, alcian blue
  • Melanoma: pos. for S100 and HMB 45
33
Q

Vaginitis

A
  • Vaginal discharge
  • Candida albicans: curdy white discharge
  • Trichomonas vaginalis: copious gray green discharge
34
Q

Benign epithelial tumors

A
  • Intramural papilloma: branching configuration w/ a lining of a single layer of cuboidal cells
  • Squamous papilloma: most are due to HPV
  • Tubulovillous adenoma: similar to colorectal type
  • Benign mixed tumor: made of stromal-type spindle glands mixed w/ mature squamous cells and glands lined by mucinous epithelium
35
Q

Vagina intraepithelial neoplasms and vaginal ca

A
  • Uncommon, usually squamous cell CA
  • Usually in women >60
  • Most arise from extension of cervical squamous cell CA but can arise as a primary tumor
36
Q

Clear cell adenocarcinoma

A
  • Usually occurs in the anterior or lateral wall of the upper vagina
  • Avg age of diagnosis 17
  • In 2/3 of pts. there is a history of prenatal exposure to diethylstilbesterol (DES) or related nonsteroid estrogens
  • Vaginal bleeding or discharge are common symptoms
37
Q

Mesenchymal tumors and tumorlike lesions

A
  • Fibroepithelial polyps: may be seen in adult women or neonates, have a fibrovascular core line by squamous epithelium
  • Leiomyoma: most common benign mesenchymal tumor of the vagina
  • Leiomyosarcoma: can be large and ulcerate, moderate to marked atypical cells
  • Rhabdomyoma: polypoid mass, seen in adults, haphazardly arranged spindle cells w/ a few mitoses
38
Q

Sarcoma Botryoides

A
  • AKA botryoid rhabdomyosarcoma
  • Rare
  • Polypoid invasive tumor arises from the anterior vaginal wall
  • Most cases are in girls <5 w/ many during first 2 years
  • Soft polypoid masses resembling a bunch of grapes
  • Myxoid stroma w/ round or spindle cells
  • Crowding of cells around blood vessels