2010
DOI: 10.1136/jcp.2010.085555
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Endometrial metaplasias and reactive changes: a spectrum of altered differentiation

Abstract: Endometrial metaplasias and changes (EMCs) are conditions frequently overlooked and misdiagnosed. The aim of this review is to update current issues and provide a classification with a practical clinicopathological approach. Hormonal or irritative stimuli are the main inducing factors of EMCs, although some metaplasias have a mutational origin. EMCs vary from reactive, degenerative lesions to those able to associate with malignancy or those having a preneoplastic potential. The most common types of EMCs are ci… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(79 citation statements)
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References 111 publications
(126 reference statements)
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“…1 Very rarely, mucinous changes of the endometrium exhibit intestinal-type differentiation with cellular brush border, goblet cells and neuroendocrine cells, although this is more common in the cervix where it is frequently associated with an endocervical neoplastic process. 2 In fact, intestinal differentiation was not observed in any of the endometrial mucinous lesions in this study. The architectural patterns of mucinous metaplasia vary widely from simple epithelial pattern to variable degrees of complexity including epithelial branching, budding, papillation, cribriforming or microglandular formation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 47%
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“…1 Very rarely, mucinous changes of the endometrium exhibit intestinal-type differentiation with cellular brush border, goblet cells and neuroendocrine cells, although this is more common in the cervix where it is frequently associated with an endocervical neoplastic process. 2 In fact, intestinal differentiation was not observed in any of the endometrial mucinous lesions in this study. The architectural patterns of mucinous metaplasia vary widely from simple epithelial pattern to variable degrees of complexity including epithelial branching, budding, papillation, cribriforming or microglandular formation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 47%
“…They commonly coexist in the same biopsy specimen 3,8 and frequently are associated with pathologic conditions including polyps, endometritis, hyperplasia and adenocarcinoma. [1][2][3][16][17][18] Mucinous change represents approximately 24% of endometrial metaplasia and is characterized by the presence of epithelial cells that have a distinctive watery blue appearance (endocervical-type epithelium) as a result of cytoplasmic accumulation of PAS-positive diastaseresistant mucin material. 1 Very rarely, mucinous changes of the endometrium exhibit intestinal-type differentiation with cellular brush border, goblet cells and neuroendocrine cells, although this is more common in the cervix where it is frequently associated with an endocervical neoplastic process.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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