Chronic sclerosing sialadenitis
Chronic sclerosing sialadenitis is a chronic inflammatory condition affecting the salivary gland. Relatively rare in occurrence, this condition is benign, but presents as hard, indurated and enlarged masses that are clinically indistinguishable from salivary gland neoplasms or tumors. It is now regarded as a manifestation of IgG4-related disease.
Involvement of the submandibular glands is also known as Küttner's tumor, named after Hermann Küttner, a German Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon, who reported four cases of submandibular gland lesions for the first time in 1896.
Presentation
The inflammatory lesions in Küttner's tumor may occur on one side or both sides, predominantly involving the submandibular gland, but is also known to occur in other major and minor salivary glands, including the parotid gland.Overall, salivary gland tumors are relatively rare, with approximately 2.5–3 cases per 100,000 people per year seen in the Western world; however, salivary gland malignancies account for 3–5% of all head and neck cancers. However, salivary tumors show a great deal of morphological diversity, as well as variations in the nature of the lesion : approximately 20% to 25% of parotid tumors, 35% to 40% of submandibular tumors, and more than 90% of sublingual gland tumors are malignant. This situation underscores the diagnostic challenges in respect of Küttner's tumor; despite being benign, this condition mimics the clinical appearance of malignancy in the salivary gland.
The swollen masses of Küttner's tumor are generally painful, and patients are advised surgical resection of a part or whole of the glandular tissue upon suspicion of possible malignancy. It is only upon post-surgical histopathology of the excised mass that the diagnosis of Küttner's tumor is definitively made.
Histological features
The histopathological features that characterize Küttner's tumor include:- Heavy infiltration of the glandular tissue by lymphocytes as well as plasma cells.
- Presence of reactive lymphoid follicles in the infiltrate, marked by a lack of atypical lymphoid cells.
- Atrophy and loss of acini.
- Encasement of the glandular ducts in thick fibrous tissues, as a result of chronic presence of inflammatory infiltrate in that area - a condition known as periductal fibrosis.
- Eventual periductal and interlobular sclerosis.
Pathogenesis
The cause and pathogenesis of this chronic condition are not very well understood. Several factors have been postulated:- Formation of a hard salivary calculus or sialolith by accumulation of calcium salts in the duct of the salivary gland. This has been proposed as the most common cause for Küttner's tumor of the submandibular gland, with sialoliths observed in an appreciable proportion of cases. However, sialolith involvement may not be found in many cases.
- Abnormalities of the salivary gland ducts leading to excessive accumulation or retention of ductal secretions, which can excite chronic inflammations.
- Immune, especially autoimmune, cause - which has gained steam, given the observation that the tissue of the glands is overrun with lymphoid immune cells and fibrous connective tissue, as well as corroboration from markedly similar lesions seen elsewhere in the body. The presence of abundant Immunoglobulin G4 associated with Plasma cells infiltrating into the salivary glands, as well as increased serum IgG4 concentration, has been noted with patients with Küttner's tumor.