Null cell adenoma of the human pituitary |
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Authors: | Kalman Kovacs Eva Horvath Nancy Ryan Calvin Ezrin |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Pathology, St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;(2) Department of Medicine, Cedars Sinai Medical Center, University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary Among 343 surgically-removed pituitary adenomas, 56 tumors were unassociated clinically or biochemically with increased hormone secretion and contained no adenohypophysial hormones by the immunoperoxidase technique, except for 10 cases in which a few scattered cells showed positive immunostaining for -TSH or -FSH, -EH, prolactin and/or -subunit. These tumors were chromophobic adenomas with no PAS, lead hematoxylin or carmoisine positivity and electron microscopy failed to reveal their morphogenesis. The term null cell adenoma of the pituitary is proposed to designate this tumor type. This term recognizes the most obvious features of these tumors: the absence of markers which would permit the disclosure of their cellular origin. Null cells are also found in the nontumorous adeno-hypophysis, suggesting that null cell adenomas derive from preexisting nonneoplastic null cells. The question of whether pituitary null cells are hormonally inactive committed precursors, uncommitted stem cells or dedifferentiated cells remains to be elucidated.This work was supported in part by Grant MA-6349 of the Medical Research Council of Canada and Grant 1 R01 CA 21905-01 awarded by the National Cancer Institute, DHEW |
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Keywords: | Adenoma Electron microscopy Immunocytology Pituitary Pituitary tumor |
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