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Ectopic decidua and metastatic squamous carcinoma: Presentation in a single pelvic lymph node

✍ Scribed by Dr. Camilla J. Cobb


Book ID
102438605
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
381 KB
Volume
38
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-4790

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✦ Synopsis


The presence of ectopic decidua in pelvic lymph nodes from patients with squamous carcinoma of the cervix makes evaluation for metastatic disease difficult due to the light microscopic similarity between decidua and sheets of squamous epithelial cells. A patient is presented in whom decidualized endometriosis was intimately associated with metastatic moderately differentiated squamous carcinoma in a single pelvic lymph node. This phenomenon afforded an excellent opportunity to study the unique morphologic features that distinguish these two entities. A prior report of this kind was not found. In the absence of obvious squamous differentiation (i.e., intercellular bridges, dyskeratosis, and keratin "pearl" formation), as is frequently the case with squamous carcinoma of the cervix, the light microscopic features that are most useful in distinguishing squamous carcinoma from decidua include the presence of well-defined nests of cohesive cells, nuclear hyperchromasia, and cellular pleomorphism.


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