Abstract

ObjectivePulmonary placental transmogrification (PT) is a benign lesion curable by resection, represented by an unusual peculiar morphological variation including placentoid bullous change in the pulmonary hamartoma. In this retrospective study, we aimed to examine the histopathological features of pulmonary hamartomas in lung, to evaluate the different histological components, especially PT, and to investigate importance of PT pattern and its relationship with other clinicopathological features.MethodsThirty-five cases of pulmonary hamartomas were recruited from the records between 2001 and 2021, divided into two groups according to presence of PT, as PT (-) and PT (+) in pathological examination.Results77.1% of all patients were male. There was no significant difference between the two groups in terms of age, sex, comorbidity, presence of symptoms, tumor localization, and radiological findings (P > 0.05). Pulmonary hamartomas were resected totally from 28 patients (80%). Five of these patients (17.9%) had PT components in resection materials with varying degree between 5 and 80%, and all were from male patients. Examination with frozen sections were performed in 15 PT (-) and 5 PT (+) patients but diagnosis with frozen sections was not achieved in any of PT (+) patients. Most of materials included chondroid components (52.22 ± 29.7%) in both groups (P < 0.05).ConclusionThe placental papillary projections are available patterns associated with a pulmonary hamartoma and these projections observed especially in frozen sections are very crucial to recognize PT pattern in hamartomas, as they can result in confusions in differential diagnosis of malignities.

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