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Lacrimal gland tumors are neoplasms arising from the epithelial or lymphoid tissue of the lacrimal gland, located in the superolateral orbit. They may be benign or malignant, and present with painless or painful mass, globe displacement, and proptosis. Epithelial tumors are most common, followed by lymphoid tumors.

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![(A) The lacrimal apparatus anatomy—illustration. (B) Coronal contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR image with fat saturation depicting the normal aspect of the lacrimal gland localized in the superolateral region of the orbit (extraconal) and its lobe divisions.

Muntean DD, Bădărînză M, Ștefan PA, Lenghel ML, Rusu GM, Csutak C, Coroian PA, Lupean RA, Fodor D. The Diagnostic Value of MRI-Based Radiomic Analysis of Lacrimal Glands in Patients with Sjögren’s Syndrome. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(17):10051. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231710051](attachment:97ba25ef-50d9-4608-8bae-6919f4740402:ijms-23-10051-g001.png)

(A) The lacrimal apparatus anatomy—illustration. (B) Coronal contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR image with fat saturation depicting the normal aspect of the lacrimal gland localized in the superolateral region of the orbit (extraconal) and its lobe divisions.

Muntean DD, Bădărînză M, Ștefan PA, Lenghel ML, Rusu GM, Csutak C, Coroian PA, Lupean RA, Fodor D. The Diagnostic Value of MRI-Based Radiomic Analysis of Lacrimal Glands in Patients with Sjögren’s Syndrome. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(17):10051. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231710051

Classification


Epithelial tumors (20–50%):

Type Behavior Notes
Pleomorphic adenoma Benign Most common benign epithelial tumor
Adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) Malignant Most common malignant epithelial tumor
Carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma Malignant transformation Aggressive
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma Malignant Less common
Adenocarcinoma Malignant Rare

Non-epithelial tumors:

Type Notes
Lymphoma (MALT type) Most common non-epithelial lacrimal gland tumor, especially in elderly
Inflammatory pseudotumor (IOI) Painful, acute onset; mimics tumor but is benign
Sarcoidosis, GPA Inflammatory; systemic involvement

Clinical Features


Symptom Description
Superolateral orbital mass Common presentation
Globe displacement Inferomedial, due to mass effect
Proptosis Axial or non-axial depending on lesion size
Pain • Absent in pleomorphic adenoma
• Present in ACC, inflammatory, or infiltrative lesions
Diplopia Due to mass effect on EOMs
Ptosis or eyelid swelling May accompany anterior extension
Duration of symptoms: Slow-growing, painless = likely benign
Rapid, painful = likely malignant or inflammatory

Radiology


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Imaging (CT/MRI) is critical to distinguish benign pleomorphic adenomas (well-defined, painless) from malignant tumors like adenoid cystic carcinoma (painful, irregular, bony invasion).

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CT findings:

Tumor Features
• Well-circumscribed
• Round or oval mass in lacrimal fossa
• Smooth bony remodeling
• No bone destruction
• Irregular, infiltrative margins
• Bone erosion or destruction
• Perineural spread (may involve orbital apex or superior orbital fissure)
Lymphoma • Molded to surrounding structures
• Homogeneous soft tissue mass
• No bony erosion
• Diffuse swelling, muscle involvement
• Painful, T2-hyperintense, enhances with contrast

MR findings:

Sequence Findings
T1 • Iso- to hypointense mass
T2 • Pleomorphic adenoma: hyperintense
• ACC: variable signal
• Lymphoma: mild hyperintensity
Post-contrast • Pleomorphic adenoma: homogeneous or heterogeneous enhancement
• ACC: irregular, heterogeneous
• Lymphoma: homogeneous, intense
Perineural spread • ACC: Enhancement along trigeminal nerve (V1/V2), cavernous sinus involvement

Differentials