How to Classify the Pituitary Neuroendocrine Tumors (PitNET)s in 2020

  • Jacqueline Trouillas
  • , Marie-Lise Jaffrain-Rea
  • , Alexandre Vasiljevic
  • , Gérald Raverot
  • , Federico Roncaroli
  • , Chiara Villa C

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Adenohypophyseal tumors, which were recently renamed pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNET), are mostly benign, but may present various behaviors: invasive, "aggressive" and malignant with metastases. They are classified into seven morphofunctional types and three lineages: lactotroph, somatotroph and thyrotroph (PIT1 lineage), corticotroph (TPIT lineage) or gonadotroph (SF1 lineage), null cell or immunonegative tumor and plurihormonal tumors. The WHO 2017 classification suggested that subtypes, such as male lactotroph, silent corticotroph and Crooke cell, sparsely granulated somatotroph, and silent plurihormonal PIT1 positive tumors, should be considered as "high risk" tumors. However, the prognostic impact of these subtypes and of each morphologic type remains controversial. In contrast, the French five-tiered classification, taking into account the invasion, the immuno-histochemical (IHC) type, and the proliferative markers (Ki-67 index, mitotic count, p53 positivity), has a prognostic value validated by statistical analysis in 4 independent cohorts. A standardized report for the diagnosis of pituitary tumors, integrating all these parameters, has been proposed by the European Pituitary Pathology Group (EPPG). In 2020, the pituitary pathologist must be considered as a member of the multidisciplinary pituitary team. The pathological diagnosis may help the clinician to adapt the post-operative management, including appropriate follow-up and early recognition and treatment of potentially aggressive forms.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCancers
Volume12
Issue number2
Early online date22 Feb 2020
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 22 Feb 2020

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