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Query: UMLS:C0007097 (
carcinoma
)
152,788
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have undertaken a pilot study to attempt to identify circulating
carcinoma
cells in a series of patients with advanced breast
carcinoma
, using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to amplify mRNA of epithelial specific antigens. Using this method to amplify mRNA of MUC1 and
cytokeratin 7
(
CK7
) the sensitivity of the technique was demonstrated by means of diluted concentrations of "spiked MCF7" cells in whole blood, showing a detection limit of 1 in 10(6) (
CK7
) and 1 in 10(5) (MUC1). Positive results were obtained from the peripheral blood of all nine female patients with advanced breast cancer for
CK7
and eight of the nine patients for MUC1.
CK7
was however detected in five of 11 healthy controls (eight females, three males) and MUC1 in one of the 11 controls. None of the control group were positive for both
CK7
and MUC1, in contrast to eight of the nine patients with advanced breast
carcinoma
who were positive for both markers. The RT-PCR method thus appears sufficiently sensitive to identify circulating tumour cells in peripheral blood samples from patients with advanced breast
carcinoma
. However a high proportion of false-positive results was seen in the control population. More extensive investigation is required before the technique is likely to be of benefit clinically.
...
PMID:Identification of carcinoma cells in peripheral blood samples of patients with advanced breast carcinoma using RT-PCR amplification of CK7 and MUC1. 1475 14
We report a tubular adenoma of the esophagus in a 79-year-old man. The tumour had progressed to an intramucosal
carcinoma
at follow-up 6 months later. The adenoma displayed a peculiar and heterogeneous histological picture with non-dysplastic and cystic areas alternating with those of a typical tubular adenoma. The tumour revealed a strong and diffuse expression of
cytokeratin 7
and basal cell cytokeratin, whereas cytokeratin 20 was focally positive only. The most remarkable finding, however, was the demonstration of intracytoplasmic inclusion-like mucoid bodies of the epithelial cells in a small area of the adenomatous component. These inclusions stained PAS positive and alcian blue negative, and electron microscopy revealed a homogeneous structure without viral-like particles.
...
PMID:Adenoma of the esophagus with intracytoplasmic mucoid bodies. 1496 71
On the basis of the heterogeneity of cytokeratins 7 and 20 expression in malignant epithelial tumors, the
cytokeratin 7
/20 immunophenotype has served as a useful diagnostic tool for discrimination of primary and/or metastatic carcinomas of unknown origin. However, the expression pattern of these cytokeratins in malignant salivary gland tumors has not been thoroughly studied. Our study material was composed of 84 malignant tumors of primary major or minor salivary gland origin. Nine histologic types of
carcinoma
were represented, including mucoepidermoid (26 cases), adenoid cystic (25), polymorphous low grade (11), salivary duct (8), acinic cell (4), ex mixed tumor (3), not otherwise specified (3), clear cell (2), and basal cell (2). In all, 13 cases of primary skin or mucosal squamous cell carcinoma with secondary salivary gland involvement were also examined. Immunoreactivity for
cytokeratin 7
was evident in all malignant salivary gland tumors; the staining pattern was diffuse and strong in 62 cases, and focal and strong in 22 cases. In contrast, 78 cases were negative for cytokeratin 20, whereas only six cases (two mucoepidermoid, one adenoid cystic, and three salivary duct) displayed focal weak positivity. Overall, 92.9% of malignant salivary gland tumors were characterized by a
cytokeratin 7
positive/20 negative immunoprofile, the remaining 7.1% of cases being positive for both cytokeratins. The latter phenotype was more common in salivary duct carcinomas (P< or =0.05). On the other hand, most squamous cell carcinomas (69%) were negative for both cytokeratins, while the remaining cases (31%) were negative for cytokeratin 20 and focally weakly positive for
cytokeratin 7
. We suggest that assessment of
cytokeratin 7
/20 immunoprofile may facilitate the differential diagnosis of (a) primary malignant salivary gland tumors from metastatic tumors, (b) metastatic salivary gland tumors, (c) primary salivary gland tumors, especially mucoepidermoid carcinomas, from squamous cell carcinomas, and (d) salivary duct carcinomas from other malignant salivary gland tumors.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical expression of cytokeratins 7 and 20 in malignant salivary gland tumors. 1497 34
The recent observation that studies of BRCA1-associated tumors contain a high proportion of medullary carcinomas and ductal carcinomas with medullary features has re-introduced pathologists to an old diagnostic problem. The term "medullary carcinoma" dates to the 19th century, but the modern entity was introduced in 1949 by Moore and Foote, who described a
carcinoma
with a lymphoid infiltrate, a favorable prognosis, and low frequency of metastasis. Almost three decades later, Ridolfi et al proposed specific criteria for diagnosis, resulting in an entity with an even more favorable prognosis and a lower incidence. The reproducibility and clinical relevance of the diagnosis have been questioned recently, and new criteria have been proposed and compared. The tumors typically express
cytokeratin 7
, often vimentin and S100-protein, but not cytokeratin 20. The usual ones are positive for p53 and negative for estrogen receptor, Her2/neu, and bcl-2. Medullary carcinomas express e-cadherin and beta-catenin more often than ordinary high-grade ductal carcinomas, and the former have genetic differences from the latter. The lymphoid infiltrate of medullary carcinomas is related to beta-actin fragments exposed by apoptotic cells. The present review discusses historical and recent developments and emphasizes diagnostic criteria.
...
PMID:Medullary carcinoma, provocative now as then. 1507 61
Herein we describe the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of 13 primary mucinous (colloid) carcinomas (MCs) of the lung, an uncommon and controversial tumor. The patients, 7 males and 6 females, ranged in age from 50 to 79 years (mean, 64.5 years). All the tumors presented as a peripheral solitary nodule with gelatinous cut-surface and well circumscribed but lacking a complete fibrous wall. The size ranged from 1 to 5.5 cm. Microscopically, they consisted of neoplastic elements floating in large mucin pools and focally lining the alveolar spaces. Eleven cases were predominantly composed of tall, columnar goblet cells (goblet cell-type MC), while 2 consisted of signet-ring tumor cells (signet-ring cell-type MC). Five tumors were incidentally discovered by chest radiographs, while the others were symptomatic. All patients underwent complete surgical resection (six lobectomies and seven wedge resections). Postoperative chemotherapy was performed in 3 cases. Overall, the median follow-up was 26 months (mean 33 months; range 9-95 months). All patients with goblet cell-type MC were alive and well, while the 2 patients with signet-ring cell-type MC died of disease. Immunohistochemically, all the 11 goblet cell-type MCs were strongly stained with CDX-2 and MUC2, 8 reacted with TTF-1, 6 with cytokeratin 20 (CK20), 9 with
cytokeratin 7
(
CK7
), and 2 with MUC-5AC. Conversely, the two signet-ring cell-type MCs were stained with TTF-1,
CK7
, and MUC5AC but were negative for CDX-2, MUC2, and CK20. Surfactant apoprotein-A (SP-A) was positive in four goblet cell-type and one signet-ring cell-type MC. When compared with 10 mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinomas (m-BAC), the latter reacted with
CK7
, CK20, MUC5AC, TTF-1, SP-A, CDX-2, and MUC2 in 100%, 90%, 100%, 30%, 10%, 0%, and 0% of the cases, respectively. In summary, MC of the lung represents an entity with two distinct clinicopathologic and immunophenotypic variants: 1) the goblet cell-type, presenting a more indolent clinical behavior and frequently co-expressing markers of intestinal and pulmonary differentiation; and 2) the more aggressive signet-ring cell-type, which retains only markers of pulmonary origin. On morphologic and immunohistochemical grounds, MCs are easily distinguishable from m-BAC. Since goblet cell-type MC strongly stains with CDX2, MUC2, and CK20, differential diagnosis with metastatic colorectal
carcinoma
is very challenging and requires appropriate clinical correlation.
...
PMID:Primary mucinous (so-called colloid) carcinomas of the lung: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study with special reference to CDX-2 homeobox gene and MUC2 expression. 1531 31
Angiosarcoma occurs very rarely in the intestinal tract as either a primary or metastatic malignancy and can present great diagnostic difficulty, especially when it displays epithelioid cytomorphology. Since only isolated case reports have been published, the purpose of this study is to more fully delineate the histopathological and clinical features from a series of 8 angiosarcomas involving the gastrointestinal tract. There were 5 male and 3 female patients whose ages ranged from 25-85 years (median 57). Presenting symptoms included intestinal bleeding, anemia and pain. Five cases involved the small bowel and 3 involved the colon/rectum. Four cases were primary to the intestinal tract, 2 patients initially presented with secondary involvement of the large bowel from occult retroperitoneal primaries, 1 patient presented with disseminated disease including small bowel involvement, and 1 case was metastatic from a breast primary. Seven cases were composed predominantly of sheets of malignant appearing epithelioid cells with subtle areas forming cleft-like spaces suggestive of vascular differentiation. Immunohistochemical studies revealed the lesional cells to be immunoreactive for CD31 (8/8), CD34 (8/8), Factor VIII (8/8), cytokeratins AE1/AE3 (7/8),
cytokeratin 7
(2/8), Cam5.2/cytokeratin 8 (5/8), and cytokeratin 19 (5/8). Cytokeratin 20 was negative in all eight cases, which contrasts sharply with the characteristic positivity for cytokeratin 20 in virtually all intestinal carcinomas. One case was weakly and focally positive for EMA and all cases were negative for S-100 protein. Cytokeratin staining was variable and ranged from focal to extensive. Follow-up was available in eight cases and ranged from 1-33 months (median 12.5). Five patients died of disease, between 1 and 33 months (median 6) after diagnosis. One recently diagnosed patient is alive with disease 18 months after diagnosis, and one patient is free of disease 27 months after original diagnosis. Angiosarcomas of the gastrointestinal tract commonly display epithelioid cytomorphology, may be diffusely and strongly positive for cytokeratins and only show subtle signs of vascular differentiation, creating potential diagnostic confusion with primary or metastatic
carcinoma
. Given the clinically aggressive behavior of angiosarcoma, proper classification and treatment is important. Immunohistochemistry with vascular markers, CK20, and S-100 protein may be helpful in differentiating angiosarcoma from
carcinoma
and melanoma.
...
PMID:Angiosarcoma involving the gastrointestinal tract: a series of primary and metastatic cases. 1510 92
An invasive micropapillary component has been described in tumors of several organs and is nearly always associated with aggressive biologic behavior. We present 14 cases of salivary duct
carcinoma
(SDC) with an invasive micropapillary component (invasive micropapillary SDC) and compare the clinicopathologic findings of these cases with those of cases of conventional SDC. The mean age of the 14 patients (10 men, 4 women) was 65.8 years (range, 26-80 years). The mean size of the tumors was 2.4 cm (range, 1.3-5 cm). The parotid gland was involved in 12 patients and the submandibular gland in 2. Histologically, all tumors had an invasive micropapillary architecture admixed with features typical for SDC. Invasive micropapillary
carcinoma
was characterized by morula-like small cell clusters without fibrovascular cores, surrounded by a clear space. Tumor cells exhibited moderate- to high-grade nuclear features, conspicuous nucleoli, and eosinophilic cytoplasm. This component was distributed diffusely in 9 tumors and focally in 5. Angiolymphatic and perineural invasion was seen in all tumors. A residual pleomorphic adenoma was detected in four tumors. Of the 12 tumors examined, all were diffusely positive for
cytokeratin 7
and epithelial membrane antigen (with a distinctive "inside-out" pattern) but negative for cytokeratin 20. Tumors were frequently immunoreactive for BRST-2 (gross cystic disease fluid protein-15) and androgen receptor protein. Aberrant expression of HER-2/neu or p53 was detected in seven tumors each. The mean Ki-67 labeling index was 33.1% (range, 6.3%-61.6%). All 14 patients with invasive micropapillary SDC had cervical or periglandular lymph node metastasis, and this value was significantly higher than for conventional SDCs. Local recurrence developed in 4 patients and distant metastatic disease in 9. Clinical follow-up (mean, 25.5 months) was available for 13 patients: 9 died of disease within 24 months after the diagnosis (mean, 17.6 months), 1 was alive with metastatic disease at 19 months, and 3 were free of disease. Overall survival of these patients with invasive micropapillary SDC was significantly shorter than that of patients with conventional SDC (n = 49) in our series (P = 0.031). Our results suggest that invasive micropapillary SDC is a distinct, aggressive variant of SDC, with a propensity for extensive lymph node metastasis and rapid disease progression.
...
PMID:Invasive micropapillary salivary duct carcinoma: a distinct histologic variant with biologic significance. 1510 94
Because the histopathological features of some primary adenocarcinomas of the sinonasal tract may show considerable overlap, we assessed the diagnostic value of a panel of immunohistochemical markers in the distinction between these malignancies. Paraffin-embedded tumour tissue sections from a series of 39 primary adenocarcinomas of the sinonasal tract, including 25 cases of intestinal-type adenocarcinoma (ITAC), 10 cases of salivary gland-type
carcinoma
and 4 cases of tubulopapillary low-grade adenocarcinoma were immunostained for CDX-2,
cytokeratin 7
and cytokeratin 20. Diffuse nuclear staining for CDX-2 was identified in 80% of ITACs, while all non-ITACs were negative. Staining for cytokeratin 20 was positive in 84% of ITACs, including all cases negative for CDX-2, but negative in all other adenocarcinomas. Cytokeratin 7 was consistently positive in 88% of ITACs and in 100% of non-ITACs. Normal sinonasal epithelia expressed
cytokeratin 7
, but not CDX-2 and cytokeratin 20. Staining for CDX-2 and cytokeratin 20 has potential use in separating ITACs from other primary malignant glandular neoplasms of the nasal cavities and paranasal sinuses.
...
PMID:CDX-2, cytokeratin 7 and cytokeratin 20 immunohistochemical expression in the differential diagnosis of primary adenocarcinomas of the sinonasal tract. 1517 80
We report a case of an 83-year-old man with a high-grade
carcinoma
of the urinary bladder who underwent cystoprostatectomy. The invasive
carcinoma
showed mixed, morphologically distinct patterns consisting of conventional high-grade urothelial
carcinoma
, glandular differentiation resembling enteric type adenocarcinoma, and acinar/tubular type differentiation, morphologically similar to Gleason grade 3 prostatic adenocarcinoma. Immunohistochemical studies revealed the acinar/tubular component of the tumor to be negative for prostate-specific antigen and prostatic acid phosphatase, but positive for
cytokeratin 7
, cytokeratin 20, high molecular weight cytokeratin (34 beta E12), and thrombomodulin, consistent with origin from the bladder rather than the prostate. Although bladder carcinomas composed of mixed morphologic patterns are not uncommon, to our knowledge, the presence of acinar/tubular type features simulating prostatic adenocarcinoma in such tumors has not been described elsewhere.
...
PMID:Urothelial carcinoma of the urinary bladder with a component of acinar/tubular type differentiation simulating prostatic adenocarcinoma. 1518 46
We recently identified metastatic prostate
carcinoma
(PCA) within perirectal lymph nodes (PLNs) from 2 patients undergoing abdominoperineal resection (APR) for rectal adenocarcinoma (RA). As this phenomenon has not been addressed by any studies in the literature and because these positive PLNs had the potential to be mistakenly diagnosed as metastatic RA, we were prompted to undertake a retrospective study of rectal resections for RA to determine the frequency of PCA metastasizing to the PLNs in this patient population. The laboratory information system of the Department of Pathology, Capital Health, Halifax, Nova Scotia was searched for lymph node (LN)-positive RAs resected by low anterior resection or APR in male patients between January 1, 1992 and December 31, 2002. The hematoxylin and eosin slides were retrieved and reviewed, comparing the histology of the primary rectal tumor with that of the LN metastases in each case. Metastases having a different histologic appearance than the primary rectal tumor or having a pattern suggestive of metastatic PCA were analyzed by immunohistochemistry to detect prostate specific antigen (PSA), prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP),
cytokeratin 7
(
CK7
), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), and carcinoembryonic antigen in LN metastases and in each RA. The presence or absence of mucin in the tumors was assessed by staining with Alcian blue, periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) +/- diastase, and modified PANFOPAS (2-hydroxy-3-naphthoic acid hydrazide/fast black B/saponification/periodic acid-Schiff). The study identified 112 cases of RA with positive LNs. Of those, 5 of 112 (4.5%) were identified as having metastatic PCA within the PLNs. All five were positive for PSA and PAP and only one case had rare CK20-positive tumor cells. The primary RAs were all diffusely positive for CK20 and carcinoembryonic antigen. Two cases of metastatic PCA expressed colonic type/acetylsialomucin, which was also seen in well-differentiated primary RAs. These 5 patients had a mean age of 76.8 years (range, 68-82 years). Four (80%) underwent APR while one (20%) underwent a low anterior resection. The mean number of LNs identified per case was 14 (range, 5-26). The mean number of LNs per case with metastatic PCA was 7.6 (range, 1-18). The majority of the LNs were under 1.0 cm in diameter. Two cases (40%) were associated with significant extranodal extension of PCA. The PLNs were mistakenly diagnosed as being involved by RA 40% of the time. On follow-up, 2 patients (40%) had died with progressive pelvic tumor, while 3 patients (60%) were alive, including 2 who, as a result of the study, were referred to the urology service for management. Both of these patients were subsequently started on medical (anti-androgen) therapy and 1 additionally had bilateral orchiectomy. In 4 of the patients, the serum PSA after the rectal resection ranged from 2.5 to 13.5 ng/mL. In 1 patient, the serum PSA was markedly elevated (5961 ng/mL), and this patient was subsequently identified on bone scan as having extensive skeletal metastases. This study identified a subset (4.5%) of patients with RA and PLNs positive for PCA. PCA may extend to the PLN basin and therefore influence the management of patients with rectal tumors and the staging, LN dissection, and management of patients with PCA. Moreover, the LNs were incorrectly diagnosed as metastatic RA 40% of the time, emphasizing the need to consider the differential diagnosis of metastatic PCA when evaluating PLNs. The diagnosis of metastatic PCA can be confirmed using an immunohistochemical panel consisting of PSA, PAP, CK20, and carcinoembryonic antigen along with mucin stains in some cases. In patients undergoing APR for RA, there should be preoperative screening for PCA as it will not be possible to do a digital rectal examination or transrectal ultrasound post-APR, and a prostate biopsy, if necessary, would have to be done via the more difficult transperineal approach.
...
PMID:Spread of prostate carcinoma to the perirectal lymph node basin: analysis of 112 rectal resections over a 10-year span for primary rectal adenocarcinoma. 1531 14
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