The American journal of surgical pathology
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Oct 2003
Crooke's cell adenoma of the pituitary: an aggressive variant of corticotroph adenoma.
Cushing's disease is caused by functional corticotroph adenomas of the pituitary, mostly noninvasive microadenomas. Classic Crooke's cells are nonneoplastic corticotrophs with cytoplasmic accumulation of cytokeratin filaments in response to glucocorticoid excess. Corticotroph adenomas exhibiting Crooke's change are rare and incompletely understood. ⋯ Most are functional adenomas occurring in middle-aged women and are invasive macroadenomas prone to recurrence. Morbidity and mortality rates are substantial. CCAs represent a distinct entity that should be separated from corticotroph adenomas without Crooke's hyaline change.