pituitary choristoma
Granular cell tumor of the pituitary region, also known as a pituitary choristoma, are rare low-grade tumors of the posterior pituitary and infundibulum.
Terminology
Care must be taken when reading older literature as granular cell tumors of the pituitary region, and alternative names including pituitary choristoma and Abrikossoff tumor, have in the past been thought to be, at least by some, equivalent to a pituicytoma, but in fact represent a histologically separate entity, recognized in the current (2016) WHO classification of CNS tumors .
Pathology
Microscopic appearance
Granular cell tumors of the pituitary are composed of sheets of large polyhedral cells, with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm filled with periodic acid-Schiff–positive granules . They have only focal spindled areas (in contrast to pituicytomas). They are usually negative for GFAP .
Immunophenotype
Immunohistochemistry shares some similarities to pituicytomas :
- TTF1: positive nuclear staining
- S100: positive
- vimentin: positive
- alpha-1-antitrypsin: positive
- GFAP: usually negative
Radiographic features
Granular cell tumors of the pituitary region are usually located in the suprasellar region, having arisen from the infundibulum, or less frequently from the posterior pituitary and thus located with the sella . When small, they can be seen localized to the pituitary stalk .
CT
Granular cell tumors of the pituitary region are usually not calcified .
MRI
Heterogeneous signal mass with variable contrast enhancement .
Differential diagnosis
When small, and clearly localized to the infundibulum the main differential includes:
When larger, then it is difficult to anticipate the diagnosis with other diagnoses being far more common, including:
- pituitary macroadenoma
- meningioma
- pituitary metastasis
- pituitary infiltration
- optic pathway glioma
See also
- granular cell tumor - general article