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Query: UMLS:C0007095 (
carcinoid
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The morphological features of 62 anorectal malignancies diagnosed on sigmoidoscopic biopsy were studied. On haemotoxylin and eosin staining the tumours were diagnosed as adenocarcinomas (43), squamous cell carcinoma (12), malignant melanoma (3),
carcinoid
(2), clear cell carcinoma (1) and poorly differentiated carcinoma (1). PAS Alcian blue, Grimelius silver stain, AgNOR and immunohistochemical stain for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and human papilloma virus (HPV) were done to further categorise these tumours. The ages of the patients varied from 18 to 77 yr (mean 43.7 yr) and the male: female ratio was 2:1. PAS Alcian blue staining was helpful in differentiating mucinous from non-mucinous adenocarcinomas and reclassifying one poorly differentiated carcinoma as
mucin
secreting adenocarcinoma. Also, it clearly identified pagetoid spread in two cases of adenocarcinomas. Grimelius silver stain was strongly positive in melanomas and neuroendocrine tumours. Basal silver staining was visualised in metaplastic foci but was absent in dysplastic epithelium. AgNOR counts may be considered useful in differentiating melanomas (high counts) from spindle cell variant of squamous carcinomas (low counts). High AgNOR counts and strong Grimelius positivity in clear cell carcinoma suggested its melanotic origin. Immunostaining for CEA and HPV were of limited value. CEA was positive in the majority of the adenocarcinomas while HPV could only be demonstrated in two squamous cell carcinomas.
...
PMID:Morphological & immunohistochemical spectrum in anorectal malignancies. 792 71
A 47-year-old man was admitted with appendicitis, and appendectomy was performed. On microscopic examination of the resected specimen, the presence of goblet cell
carcinoid
in the tip of appendix was revealed. This tumor showed an aggressive nature with perineural and vascular invasion around the appendiceal serosa. The tumor was composed of two main cell populations:
mucin
-producing (goblet cell type) and silver-positive cells (endocrine differentiation). Additionally, a few cells were also positive for serotonin and lysozyme, but negative for gastrin and ACTH. These findings suggest that goblet cell
carcinoid
share some functional and histologic characteristics with
carcinoid
tumors and adenocarcinomas, although it is a distinct entity.
...
PMID:Goblet cell carcinoid of the appendix. 794 43
Non-small cell lung cancer with neuroendocrine differentiation may represent a subset of patients with a more aggressive (like small cell lung cancer) or less aggressive (like
carcinoid
) biological behavior. To investigate their prognostic significance, immunohistochemical stains for 4 neuroendocrine markers (neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin A, Leu-7, and synaptophysin) and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) were studied in 260 patients with surgically resected stage I and II non-small cell lung cancer. The following percentages of cases were positive for each marker: neuron-specific enolase, 70.0%; chromogranin A, 14.2%; Leu-7, 7.7%; synaptophysin, 11.2%; and CEA, 68.5%. Sixty-one (23.5%) were positive for > or = 2 neuroendocrine markers. When compared to adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma displayed lower positivity for CEA and > or = 2 neuroendocrine markers. There was no significant difference in stage, site of relapse (distant versus local), disease-free, or overall survival for each marker individually or for those with > or = 2 neuroendocrine markers. Multivariate analysis showed that higher nodal stage (N1 versus N0), tumor stage (T2 versus T1), older age, and the presence of
mucin
predicted for poorer overall survival. Neuroendocrine markers and CEA were not of prognostic significance in this group of patients with resected stage I and II non-small cell lung cancer.
...
PMID:The prognostic significance of neuroendocrine markers and carcinoembryonic antigen in patients with resected stage I and II non-small cell lung cancer. 818 76
The first example of mixed strumal and mucinous
carcinoid
tumor of the ovary is reported. The vast majority of the tumor was composed of
carcinoid
cells arranged in a trabecular-insular configuration admixed with obvious thyroid follicles. In addition, glands lined by
mucin
-producing cells were seen in some areas. A transition from the strumal
carcinoid
component to the mucinous glands was seen. Immunohistochemical studies showed that the strumal and mucinous
carcinoid
components were positive for chromogranin A, serotonin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, clearly demonstrating that both were neuroendocrine in nature.
...
PMID:Mixed strumal and mucinous carcinoid tumor of the ovary. 860 31
A case of small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the uterine cervix associated with squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma in situ is reported. The tumor consisted mainly of uniform small cells with a population of intermediate cells that resembled
carcinoid
tumor cells. Foci of micro-invasive squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma in situ were recognized separately, adjacent to the main tumor. Both Grimelius stain and immunostaining of serotonin were positive for small-cell and intermediate-cell carcinoma. Neurosecretory granules were demonstrated by electron microscopy. Microacini with positive
mucin
staining and microvilli-like structures suggested glandular or exocrine differentiation of the tumor. Three distinctive types of differentiation, neuroendocrine, exocrine and squamous characteristics, were expressed in the tumor.
...
PMID:Small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the uterine cervix associated with micro-invasive squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma in situ. 887 9
The clinicopathologic features, including a detailed immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and flow cytometric analysis, are described in three cases of atypical
carcinoid
tumor of the larynx. All patients had metastatic disease within cervical lymph nodes at presentation and eventually developed distant metastases. Special stains revealed focal intracytoplasmic
mucin
accumulation, and immunohistochemistry showed the tumors to be positive for CAM 5.2, CEA, chromogranin A, and calcitonin. In two cases, double-staining techniques revealed occasional cells that stained for both
mucin
and chromogranin A. The histochemical and immunohistochemical findings in these two cases were confirmed at the ultrastructural level, with most tumor cells containing many neurosecretory granules. Smaller numbers of cells contained
mucin
vacuoles and, in occasional cells, both
mucin
and neuroendocrine granules were identified. The three tumors exhibited positive staining with D07 (anti-p53), and flow cytometric analysis revealed DNA aneuploidy and polyploidy. The double-staining and ultrastructural features indicate that laryngeal atypical
carcinoid
qualifies for the designation of true amphicrine carcinoma. Further study is necessary to determine whether mutation of the p53 gene is important in the evolution of laryngeal neuroendocrine tumors and whether DNA aneuploidy or polyploidy identifies a subset of these tumors with a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Atypical carcinoid tumor of the larynx: an immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and flow cytometric analysis. 927 73
The diagnosis of adenocarcinoid (mucinous/goblet cell
carcinoid
) is usually unexpected by both clinicians and pathologists. We report here the case of a 74-year-old man with gastric lymphoma (B-cell MALToma) diagnosed by endoscopy, who was found on exploratory laparotomy also to have extensive intraabdominal involvement by adenocarcinoid, arising from the ileum and/or appendix. The patient died two years after diagnosis with bladder outlet and small bowel obstruction due to diffuse metastases. In addition to
mucin
positivity, immunohistochemical stains demonstrated the tumor to be positive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, serotonin, gastrin, and glucagon. Of histogenetic interest, some individual neoplastic cells appeared to be positive for both
mucin
and chromogranin, and this was confirmed by the electron microscopic finding of microvilli, intracytoplasmic
mucin
droplets, and neurosecretory granules involving the same neoplastic cells. This also appears to be the first reported case of adenocarcinoid associated with lymphoma and demonstration of histochemical/immunohistochemical and ultrastructural evidence of cellular components with dual mucinous adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine features, and the second reported case to have prostatic metastases.
...
PMID:Adenocarcinoid of ileum and appendix, incidentally discovered during exploratory laparotomy for gastric MALT lymphoma, with subsequent diffuse prostatic metastases: report of a case with light, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic studies. 995 28
In a review of 79 cases of gall bladder malignancy, nineteen cases were labelled as unusual tumors while sixty were diagnosed as adenocarcinoma. Alcian blue, PAS, Grimelius' and Masson trichrome stains were done. Expression of EMA, CEA and desmin was assessed (PAP). Histological subtype was revised, in eleven cases out of 19. Five tumors initially diagnosed as squamous cell carcinoma were found to be positive for
mucin
and CEA and hence were reclassified as adenosquamous carcinoma. Three undifferentiated carcinomas and two malignant carcinoids were labelled as adenocarcinoma and composite tumor respectively. Positive reactivity with CEA and alcian blue PAS and absence of AFP helped in differentiating one giant cell carcinoma from hepatocellular carcinoma. No definite marker could be identified in one case of malignant mesenchymal tumor. Histochemistry and immunohistochemistry also helped in confirming the diagnosis of three cases of carcinoma in situ, one of malignant
carcinoid
and three of clear cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Diagnostic distinction between unusual malignant tumors of gall bladder by histochemistry and antigenic phenotype. 1063 74
Only rare primary mucinous (goblet cell) carcinoids of the ovary have been reported, and their clinicopathologic features have not been well delineated. The authors studied 17 examples from patients 14 to 74 years of age. The clinical presentations were similar to those of ovarian neoplasms in general. The tumors ranged from 0.8 to 30 cm in diameter. In six cases the tumor was in the wall of a mature cystic teratoma, appearing grossly as solid nodules or areas of thickening in four of them, six tumors were entirely solid, and five were solid associated with other types of cystic tumor. The tumors were divided into three groups on the basis of their microscopic features. Six neoplasms, designated "well differentiated," were composed of small glands, many of which floated in pools of
mucin
. The glands were lined by goblet cells and columnar cells, some of which were of neuroendocrine type. Three tumors, designated "atypical," were characterized by crowded glands, some of which were confluent, small islands with a cribriform pattern, and scattered microcystic glands. The glands were lined by cuboidal to columnar cells, some of them neuroendocrine, admixed with goblet cells. Eight tumors, designated "carcinoma arising in mucinous
carcinoid
," contained islands and larger nodules of tumor cells, or closely packed glands, as well as single cells, mainly of the signet ring cell type. Most of the cells were devoid of
mucin
and were severely atypical with marked mitotic activity. Necrosis was present in all eight tumors. Seven of the eight tumors with a carcinomatous component contained at least minor foci of well-differentiated mucinous
carcinoid
; the eighth contained only foci of atypical mucinous
carcinoid
. The neuroendocrine nature of a variable proportion of the cells in all three groups was demonstrated by staining for neuroendocrine markers. The mucinous nature of other cells was confirmed by mucicarmine or Alcian blue stains. The ovary contained an intrinsic component of trabecular and insular
carcinoid
, and of strumal
carcinoid
in one case each, an adjacent mature cystic teratoma in six cases, mucinous cystadenocarcinoma in three cases, and borderline mucinous cystic tumor, borderline Brenner tumor, and epidermoid cyst in one case each. Fifteen tumors were stage I, one was stage II, and one was stage III. The last two tumors had a carcinomatous component. Follow-up data were available for 15 patients; 12 were alive and free of tumor 2.3 to 14 years (average, 4.7 years) after the ovarian tumor was excised. One patient, whose tumor had a carcinomatous component, died 3 years postoperatively of unrelated causes. Two patients, both of whom had a carcinomatous component in their tumor, died 9 and 12 months postoperatively. Primary mucinous carcinoids must be distinguished from metastatic mucinous
carcinoid
tumors from the appendix or elsewhere. Features supporting an ovarian origin are the additional presence in the specimen of teratoma or an ovarian surface epithelial tumor, an absence of blood vessel or lymphatic space invasion, and confinement to a single ovary. Similar features help to distinguish mucinous carcinoids from Krukenberg tumors. Mucinous carcinoids should also be distinguished from strumal carcinoids, which can contain mucinous glands, and insular
carcinoid
tumors that arise rarely in the wall of a mucinous cystic neoplasm. Although the number of cases in this series is small, the follow-up data suggest that the degree of differentiation, particularly the presence of frank carcinoma, is an important prognostic factor.
...
PMID:Ovarian mucinous carcinoids including some with a carcinomatous component: a report of 17 cases. 1134 66
We undertook a detailed histologic study to identify specific morphologic features that may aid in distinguishing prostatic adenocarcinoma with lung metastases (PALM) from other pulmonary tumors with similar histologic features. In 16 cases, we found 3 predominant architectural patterns: microacinar (n = 10), tubulopapillary (ductal; n = 4), and
carcinoid
-like (n = 2). Characteristic features of PALM included small acinar and/or cribriform growth, frequent lymphangitic permeation, lack of stromal response, uniform round nuclei with prominent nucleoli, intraluminal blue
mucin
, and prominent cell borders. By immunohistochemical staining, prostate-specific antigen and prostate-specific acid phosphatase were present in 13 of 14 and 13 of 13 cases, respectively. Metastatic prostatic duct adenocarcinoma exhibited morphologic features similar to metastatic colonic adenocarcinoma. Two cases had a
carcinoid
-like appearance with nested or solid architecture, parachromatin clearing, and prominent nucleoli, but lacked the finely stippled chromatin pattern of
carcinoid
tumors. Several features that may result in misinterpretation or lack of association of the neoplasm in the lung with a prostatic primary include lung metastasis preceding the detection of a prostatic primary tumor, solitary pulmonary nodule, tubulopapillary (ductal) or
carcinoid
-like pattern, scant material in which histologic features of metastatic prostate carcinoma are not fully appreciated, and frequent necrosis. Attention to specific discriminating histologic features, supported by immunohistochemical staining, may be useful in the differential diagnosis, which is therapeutically and prognostically critical.
...
PMID:The morphologic spectrum of metastatic prostatic adenocarcinoma to the lung: special emphasis on histologic features overlapping with other pulmonary neoplasms. 1193 29
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