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Review
. 1991 Jan 1;67(1):172-9.
doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19910101)67:1<172::aid-cncr2820670129>3.0.co;2-x.

Acinic cell carcinoma. Clinicopathologic review

Affiliations
Review

Acinic cell carcinoma. Clinicopathologic review

J E Lewis et al. Cancer. .

Abstract

The authors reviewed 90 cases of acinic cell carcinoma treated at the Mayo Clinic to assess long-term follow-up and to study features predictive of disease progression. Sixty-three patients (55 females and 35 males) were seen for primary treatment; 27 had recurrent disease when first evaluated. Histologically, these tumors were composed of serous acinar cells and intercalated duct-type cells. Morphologic patterns included solid, microcystic, follicular, and papillary-cystic. All patients were followed for at least 10 years or until death. Of the primary treatment group, 44% had local recurrence, 19% had metastasis, and 25% died of disease. Disease first recurred locally up to 30 years after presentation and resulted in death after as many as 38 years. Poor prognostic features include pain or fixation; gross invasion; microscopic features of desmoplasia, atypia, or increased mitotic activity; and excision as initial treatment. Neither morphologic pattern nor cell composition was a predictive feature.

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