ARTICLE
Primary extramammary Pagets disease (EPD) is characterized
by adenocarcinoma with apocrine differentiation that begins within the
epidermis. In the secondary form of the disease, the adenocarcinoma extends
into the epidermis from a contiguous organ. The latter phenomenon is known
as pagetoid phenomenon and occurs in cases of rectal, cervical, and bladder
carcinomas, and sebaceous carcinoma ascending infundibula to the surface
epithelium. Despite the importance of diffentiation between primary and
secondary EPD, the diseases can not be properly distinguished by histopathology
alone. We therefore used electron microscopy to confirm the present case
of rectal carcinoma with pagetoid phenomenon.
Case report
A 64-year-old Japanese woman was referred to our hospital with complaints
of perianal erosion (Fig.
1) and rectal bleeding. She had noticed the lesion five years previously,
and it had gradually spread. Microscopic examination of skin biopsies
taken from the perianal erosion revealed the presence of Paget cells.
She was admitted to the Department of Surgery of our hospital, where coexisting
rectal carcinoma was found. An operation was performed to remove both
lesions.
Light microscopic findings
Light microscopy revealed many Paget cells with clear
cytoplasms and large pleomorphic nuclei, in addition to glandular structures
(Fig. 2). Both the perianal
and rectal carcinoma lesions were positively stained for PAS, CEA, and
CK20, and negatively stained for GCDFP15 and CK7.
Electron microscopy
Electron microscopy revealed many microvilli protruding into the intracytoplasmic
cavity in the Paget cells of the epidermis (Fig.
3). These microvilli were very similar to those observed in the rectal
carcinoma cells (Fig. 4).
Discussion
Extramammary Paget's disease (EPD) derived from the epidermis or its
appendages is designated as primary
EPD. Instances of secondary EPD, in which the adenocarcinoma extends
into the epidermis from a contiguous organ, are relatively rare. Some
visceral carcinomas, such as rectal carcinoma and anal canal carcinoma,
show epidermotropism manifesting as an intraepidermal invasion, or so
called pagetoid phenomenon [1]. However, it is difficult to distinguish
between primary and secondary EPD based on clinical and routine histological
findings. In previous studies comparing cytokeratin (CK) expression between
cases of primary and secondary EPD, the combination of two markers, CK7
and CK20, was shown to be a useful index for the differentiation of primary
EPD from a pagetoid spread of extracutaneous malignancies [2-5]. In a
study by Watanabe et al. [2], most of the cases of secondary EPD
showed the immunophenotype CK7()/CK20(+) (like the patient in the
present study), while a small number showed CK7(+)/CK20(+).
Previous electron microscopic analyses have
clearly indicated the many similarities between adenocarcinoma cells and
Paget cells; e.g.both cell types have microvilli projecting into the intracytoplasmic
cavity [5].
CONCLUSION
We concluded that electron microscopy was a very useful techniques for
differentiating between EPD and pagetoid phenomenon.
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