Searching for an intrinsic neuroendocrine cell in the kidney: An immunohistochemical study of the fetal, infantile and adult kidney

1999 
Summary The pathogenesis of primary renal carcinoid tumor is unknown. One hypothesis has implied derivation from a yet unrecognized intrinsic neuroendocrine cell in the renal parenchyma/hilum either as a minute endocrineparacrine constituent or resulting from entrapped/misplaced progenitor cells of the so-called dispersed neuroendocrine system during organogenesis. Immunohistochemical staining for chromogranin and serotonin was systematically performed on a whole-mount and geographically mapped normal adult kidney, kidneys from 15 fetuses (age range: 15 to 38 weeks), and renal specimens from 18 infants/children (age range: 7 days to 123 months). Minute paraganglion nests (composed of chromogranin positive/serotonin negative chief cells and S-100 protein positive dendritic cells) were incidentally detected within the renal hilum primitive stroma (unilaterally) of two fetuses at 22 and 26 weeks. Sequestration and persistence of such paraganglion nests during renal growth and maturation would offer a basis for the rare occurrence of extra-adrenal paraganglioma involving the renal hilum/pedicle. Otherwise, no neuroendocrine cell was detected within the renal parenchyma or hilum, therefore not validating/sustaining the aforementioned hypothesis in the pathogenesis of renal carcinoid tumor.
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