Ameloblastomas are locally aggressive odontogenic tumors that most commonly arise in the mandible and maxilla and often harbor BRAF V600E mutations. While rare extragnathic ameloblastomas have been reported, primary pulmonary cases have not been documented. We identified 3 pulmonary neoplasms with features of ameloblastoma that were submitted for consultation between 2022 and 2025 at 3 academic institutions and performed detailed clinicopathologic and molecular analysis. The tumors presented as 5.4 to 7.3 cm peribronchial solitary lung masses. All resected tumors exhibited a predominant stellate reticulum-like component composed of loosely arranged p40-reactive bland squamoid-to-spindled cells with long intercellular bridges, and streaming and swirling architecture, surrounded by palisaded columnar cells with focal reverse nuclear polarity at the interface with myxoid stroma. All tumors were immunoreactive for BRAF V600E IHC, and BRAF V600E mutations were confirmed by molecular assays, including broad next-generation sequencing on 2 cases. Florid hyperplasia of entrapped pneumocytes initially suggested a biphasic neoplasm, but the absence of BRAF V600E IHC labeling confirmed pneumocyte entrapment. Occult gnathic primary tumors were excluded by subsequent clinical examination, including negative panoramic dental x-rays. No recurrences or metastases have been observed to date. This first series of primary pulmonary ameloblastomas highlights a distinctive tumor with histologic and molecular features identical to gnathic counterparts. We discuss the potential histogenesis of these unusual tumors.
Chang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.