Abstract

The last two decades have seen significant advances in the pathology of sinonasal tract neoplasms. This was the consequence of the availability of several innovative diagnostic tools, which resulted in adynamic evolution of entities and splitting of newly defined or conceptualized entities and subtypes that have been included in the spectrum of old heterogeneous diseases. Most of these new tumor subtypes have distinctive demographic, clinicopathologic, and biological characteristics with prognostic and therapeutic implications for individual patients. NUT carcinoma (NUT midline carcinoma) was separated from the spectrum of sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) and is defined by specific recurrent translocation. On the other hand, the recently described SMARCB1-deficient carcinoma (while probably representing adistinctive clinicopathologic entity) remained as avariant in the SNUC spectrum. Anew neoplasm in the spectrum of non-keratinizing carcinomas is the human papillomavirus(HPV)-related adenoid-cystic-like sinonasal carcinoma with its distinctive, albeit diverse, morphology. In the group of small round-cell malignancies, adamantinoma-like Ewing sarcoma has been delineated as an important diagnostic pitfall given its prominent epithelial differentiation. Inclusion of the biphenotypic (myoneural) sinonasal sarcoma (BSS) as alow-grade malignancy defined by recurrent PAX3/MAML3-translocation represents an important feature of the new WHO classification given the distinctive biological behavior of this low-grade non-metastasizing rare entity, which has been uniformly misclassified as a peripheral nerve sheath tumor or leiomyosarcoma in the past. Recognition of CTNNB1 mutations and STAT6/NAB2 gene fusions as defining genetic markers for sinonasal hemangio‑/glomangiopericytoma and solitary fibrous tumors, respectively, represents another important achievement in recent years. This review summarizes the new aspects in the WHO classification and also addresses recently described entities that have not been included in the WHO classification.

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