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The 2022 WHO classification of tumors of the pituitary gland : An update on aggressive and metastatic pituitary neuroendocrine tumors

Casar-Borota, Olivera ; Burman, Pia LU and Lopes, M. Beatriz (2024) In Brain Pathology
Abstract

The vast majority of pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs) are benign and slow growing with a low relapse rate over many years after surgical resection. However, about 40% are locally invasive and may not be surgically cured, and about one percentage demonstrate an aggressive clinical behavior. Exceptionally, these aggressive tumors may metastasize outside the sellar region to the central nervous system and/or systemically. The 2017 (4th Edition) WHO Classification of Pituitary Tumors abandoned the terminology “atypical adenoma” for tumors previously considered to have potential for a more aggressive behavior since its prognostic value was not established. The 2022 (5th Edition) WHO Classification of the Pituitary Tumors emphasizes... (More)

The vast majority of pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs) are benign and slow growing with a low relapse rate over many years after surgical resection. However, about 40% are locally invasive and may not be surgically cured, and about one percentage demonstrate an aggressive clinical behavior. Exceptionally, these aggressive tumors may metastasize outside the sellar region to the central nervous system and/or systemically. The 2017 (4th Edition) WHO Classification of Pituitary Tumors abandoned the terminology “atypical adenoma” for tumors previously considered to have potential for a more aggressive behavior since its prognostic value was not established. The 2022 (5th Edition) WHO Classification of the Pituitary Tumors emphasizes the concept that morphological features distinguish indolent tumors from locally aggressive ones, however, the proposed histological subtypes are not consistent with the real life clinical characteristics of patients with aggressive tumors/carcinomas. So far, no single clinical, radiological or histological parameter can determine the risk of growth or malignant progression. Novel promising molecular prognostic markers, such as mutations in ATRX, TP53, SF3B1, and epigenetic DNA modifications, will need to be verified in larger tumor cohorts. In this review, we provide a critical analysis of the WHO guidelines for prognostic stratification and diagnosis of aggressive and metastatic PitNETs. In addition, we discuss the new WHO recommendations for changing ICD-O and ICD-11 codes for PitNET tumor behavior from a neoplasm either “benign” or “unspecified, borderline, or uncertain behavior” to “malignant” neoplasm regardless of the clinical presentation, histopathological subtype, and tumor location. We encourage multidisciplinary initiatives for integrated clinical, histological and molecular classification, which would enable early recognition of these challenging tumors and initiation of more appropriate and aggressive treatments, ultimately improving the outcome.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
metastatic pituitary tumor, PitNET, pituitary adenoma, pituitary carcinoma, pituitary neuroendocrine tumor
in
Brain Pathology
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • pmid:39218431
  • scopus:85202887731
ISSN
1015-6305
DOI
10.1111/bpa.13302
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c4f74a52-890e-473a-8277-7a43177bc19c
date added to LUP
2024-12-13 14:08:22
date last changed
2024-12-27 15:08:04
@article{c4f74a52-890e-473a-8277-7a43177bc19c,
  abstract     = {{<p>The vast majority of pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs) are benign and slow growing with a low relapse rate over many years after surgical resection. However, about 40% are locally invasive and may not be surgically cured, and about one percentage demonstrate an aggressive clinical behavior. Exceptionally, these aggressive tumors may metastasize outside the sellar region to the central nervous system and/or systemically. The 2017 (4th Edition) WHO Classification of Pituitary Tumors abandoned the terminology “atypical adenoma” for tumors previously considered to have potential for a more aggressive behavior since its prognostic value was not established. The 2022 (5th Edition) WHO Classification of the Pituitary Tumors emphasizes the concept that morphological features distinguish indolent tumors from locally aggressive ones, however, the proposed histological subtypes are not consistent with the real life clinical characteristics of patients with aggressive tumors/carcinomas. So far, no single clinical, radiological or histological parameter can determine the risk of growth or malignant progression. Novel promising molecular prognostic markers, such as mutations in ATRX, TP53, SF3B1, and epigenetic DNA modifications, will need to be verified in larger tumor cohorts. In this review, we provide a critical analysis of the WHO guidelines for prognostic stratification and diagnosis of aggressive and metastatic PitNETs. In addition, we discuss the new WHO recommendations for changing ICD-O and ICD-11 codes for PitNET tumor behavior from a neoplasm either “benign” or “unspecified, borderline, or uncertain behavior” to “malignant” neoplasm regardless of the clinical presentation, histopathological subtype, and tumor location. We encourage multidisciplinary initiatives for integrated clinical, histological and molecular classification, which would enable early recognition of these challenging tumors and initiation of more appropriate and aggressive treatments, ultimately improving the outcome.</p>}},
  author       = {{Casar-Borota, Olivera and Burman, Pia and Lopes, M. Beatriz}},
  issn         = {{1015-6305}},
  keywords     = {{metastatic pituitary tumor; PitNET; pituitary adenoma; pituitary carcinoma; pituitary neuroendocrine tumor}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Brain Pathology}},
  title        = {{The 2022 WHO classification of tumors of the pituitary gland : An update on aggressive and metastatic pituitary neuroendocrine tumors}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bpa.13302}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/bpa.13302}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}