The diagnosis and significance of visceral pleural
invasion in lung carcinoma. Histologic predictors and the role of elastic
stains.
Bunker ML, Raab SS, Landreneau RJ,
Silverman JF
Invasion of the visceral pleura is an important component of lung carcinoma
staging, and in some studies is an independent prognostic indicator. Evaluation
of invasion by H&E may be indeterminate. Elastic stains can be helpful but
are performed rarely. We reviewed all lung carcinoma resections from 1993 for 13
histologic features potentially predictive of pleural invasion. Of 57
resections, 20 were indeterminate by H&E. Verhoeff-Van Gieson (VVG) stain
revealed invasion in 8 cases, increasing the pathologic stage in 1. VVG stain
was negative in 12 cases, 2 of which had been falsely reported as positive,
decreasing the stage in 1. Angiolymphatic invasion and single-cell spread were
significant predictors of invasion. Absence of both or the presence of
intervening aerated parenchyma predicted lack of involvement in all cases.
Elastic stains can provide prognostically important information, changing the
pathologic stage in 4% of lung carcinoma resections overall and in 10% of cases
indeterminate by H&E for pleural invasion.
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