Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recently, hepatitis virus-associated chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis has been suggested to be involved in the pathogenesis of cholangiocarcinoma (CC). A 52-year-old man was diagnosed as CC with a background of hepatitis B virus (HBV)-dependent cirrhosis. A minute hepatic tumor was found during the follow-up, and was diagnosed as CC on percutaneous biopsy. The patient died of hepatic failure and an autopsy revealed the tumor to be a well to moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. An immunohistological analysis of HBV X gene-encoded protein (HBX) was neither detected in the cancerous nor in the noncancerous tissue. No oncogenic role of the virus was verified in this case.
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PMID:Cholangiocarcinoma with a background of hepatitis B virus-associated cirrhosis. 1139 6

We report the case of a 19-year-old woman who presented with a hepatic mass without cirrhosis. Light microscopy revealed a cholangiocarcinoma having both well-differentiated adenocarcinoma and lymphoepithelioma-like undifferentiated carcinoma components. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor showed strong and diffuse expression for cytokeratin AE1, 5D3, and CK22. The tumor cells were positive for p53 protein (more than 75% of the cells) but negative for bcl-2 and LMP1. Abundant Epstein-Barr virus EBER (1/2) oligonucleotides were detected in both tumor components, but not in the lymphoid stroma or the nontumor liver. To the best of our knowledge, this is the third report of an Epstein-Barr virus-associated primary hepatobiliary adenocarcinoma with lymphoepithelioma-like component. Int J Surg Pathol 8(4):347-351, 2000
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PMID:Epstein-Barr Virus-Associated Cholangiocarcinoma with Lymphoepithelioma-Like Component. 1149 16

The paleopathological study of 40 Italian Renaissance mummies has allowed us to perform about 20 diagnoses, of which 5 concern infectious (smallpox, hepatitis, condyloma, syphilis and pneumonia), 4 metabolic (obesity, atherosclerosis, gallstones and uric acid nephrolithiasis), 2 articular (DISH and rheumatoid arthritis) and 2 neoplastic (skin apithelioma and colon adenocarcinoma) diseases. The mummy of an anonymous child, dated back to the 16th century (C14=1569 +/- 60), presented a diffuse vesiculo-pustular exanthema. Macroscopic aspects and regional distribution suggested smallpox, while EM reavealed many egg-shaped, virus-like particles (250 x 50 nm), with a central dense core. Following incubation with anti-smallpox virus antiserum and protein A-gold complex immunostaining, the particles resulted completely covered with protein A-gold. These results clearly show that this Neapolitan child died of a severe form of smallpox some four centuries ago. The mummy of Maria of Aragon, Marquise of Vasto (1503-1568), reavealed on the left arm an oval, cutaneous ulcer (15x10 nm) with linen dressing. Indirect immunofluorescence with anti-treponema pallidum antibody identified a large number of filaments with the morphological characteristics of fluorescent treponemes. EM evidenced typical spirochetes, with axial fibril. These findings clearly demonstrate a treponemal, probably venereal, infection. The mummy of Ferrante I of Aragon, King of Naples (1431-1494), revealed an adenocarcinoma extensively infiltrating the muscles of the small pelvis. A molecular study of the neoplastic tissue evidenced a typical mutation of the K-ras gene codon 12:the normal sequence GGT (glycine) was altered into GAT (aspartic acid). At present this genetic change is the most frequent mutation of the K-ras gene in sporadic colorectal cancer. The alimentary "environment" of the Neapolitan court of the XV century, with its abundance of natural alimentary alkylating agents, well explains this acquired mutation. These and other diseases as, for example, a fatal puerperal complication, a thyroid goiter, a case of Wilson's cirrhosis, some cases of anthracosis and other peculiar traumatic conditions, such as a mortal stab-wound, can elucidate the pathocenosis of the wealthy classes of the Italian Renaissance.
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PMID:Renaissance mummies in Italy. 1162 3

We report a case of a 40-year-old man of Bantu origin, affected by both HBV infection and primitive hepatocarcinoma in the absence of cirrhosis. The fine-needle aspiration specimen reported a rare variant of liver cancer resembling an adenocarcinoma. The neoplasm was certainly a hepatic primitive carcinoma, because chest X-ray, cranial computed tomography, colonoscopy, and abdominal computed tomography did not detect neoplastic lesions and alpha-fetoprotein was > 1000 ng/mL. The present neoplasm, characterized by severe portal hypertension and absence of cirrhosis, is rare in Italy, but largely diffused in Bantu people in Africa.
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PMID:An unusual case, in Italy, of hepatocarcinoma characterized by portal hypertension and absence of cirrhosis. 1167 60

Fibrosis is one of the hallmarks of inflammatory and repair processes in pathology. Various exogenous and endogenous stimuli, including tumor development, can induce inflammatory reactions. During the post-equilibrium phase after IV injection of non specific contrast media, CT and/or MR allow the study of these inflammatory answers to tumoral or infectious processes. Delayed enhancement of collagenic fibrous tissue during the late post-equilibrium phase is an essential complementary data in the characterization of many liver lesions: cirrhosis, cholangiocarcinoma, focal nodular hyperplasia, fibrous metastasis. but also for the differential diagnosis of pancreatic diseases (groove pancreatitis vs ductal adenocarcinoma) or of gastro-intestinal diseases (gastric adenocarcinoma vs lymphoma, mechanical complication vs inflammatory bouts of ileal Crohn's disease).
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PMID:[Fibrous tissue(s): a key for lesion characterization in digestive diseases]. 1198 97

Inadvertent transmission of neoplastic cells from an organ donor can occur at the time of transplantation. Determination of recipient versus donor origin of a tumor is crucial for patient management. This report illustrates the use of microsatellite (MS) analysis to determine the origin of adenocarcinoma arising in a liver transplant. The study patient was a 42-year-old male who had received a liver transplant for hepatitis C and alcohol-related cirrhosis. At the 1-year follow-up visit, a 1.5-cm liver mass was identified during routine ultrasound of the vascular anastamoses. A liver biopsy showed a moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. Tumor, donor, and recipient DNA were isolated from the paraffin-embedded liver biopsy, pretransplant donor liver biopsy, and the explant liver tissue, respectively. MS analysis was performed by polymerase chain reaction using 5 markers: D5S346, ACTC, D2S123, D18S34, and TP53. The allelic patterns of tumor DNA were identical to those of donor DNA and were distinct from the DNA profile of the recipient. The use of MS analysis clearly established that the adenocarcinoma was of donor origin.
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PMID:Origin of adenocarcinoma in a transplanted liver determined by microsatellite analysis. 1205 79

Recently, several epidemiologic observations have suggested that obesity might be an independent risk factor for certain malignancies such as breast cancer, colon cancer, renal cell carcinoma, and esophageal adenocarcinoma. However, there are no studies examining the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in obesity. The aim of the present study was to determine whether obesity is an independent risk factor for HCC in patients with cirrhosis. Explanted liver specimens from a national database on patients undergoing liver transplantation were examined for HCC, and the incidence was compared among patients with varying body mass indices according to the etiology of cirrhosis. A multivariate analysis was used for controlling other potentially confounding variables such as age and sex. Among 19,271 evaluable patients, the overall incidence of HCC was 3.4% (n = 659) with a slightly higher prevalence among obese patients compared with lean patients. Obesity was an independent predictor for HCC in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (odds ratio [OR], 3.2; 95% CI, 1.5-6.6; P =.002) and cryptogenic cirrhosis (OR, 11.1; 95% CI, 1.5-87.4; P =.02). Obesity was not an independent predictor in patients with hepatitis C, hepatitis B, primary biliary cirrhosis, and autoimmune hepatitis. The higher risk of HCC in obese patients is confined to alcoholic liver disease and cryptogenic cirrhosis. In conclusion, more frequent surveillance for HCC may be warranted in obese patients with alcoholic and cryptogenic cirrhosis. However, as this study is based on patients with advanced cirrhosis, our findings need to be confirmed in a broader population of individuals with cirrhosis.
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PMID:Is obesity an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhosis? 1208 59

We report a case with unexpected toxicity after low-dose docetaxel chemotherapy. The patient had a history of clinically latent HCV-positive hepatic cirrhosis when she presented with inoperable pulmonary adenocarcinoma. She was recruited in a protocol combining standard radiotherapy (RT) with docetaxel (30 mg/m2 week). On day 7, after the 1st docetaxel infusion, grade III neutropenia (980 neutrophils), grade II platelet toxicity (90,000/ml) and lymphopenia (486/ml) had developed. Chemotherapy and RT were interrupted and the neutrophil counts were partially restored (1400/ml), while the platelet counts were back to normal (140,000/ml) and the lymphocyte counts were further reduced (320/ml), on day 15. Bilateral leg oedema and hair loss appreared. On day 21, there was a full restoration of neutrophil counts (1890/ml), while there was persistent lymphocytopenia (300/ml). Alopecia grade III was now evident. Dysphagia grade II complicated with fungal oropharyngeal infection appeared on day 24 (24 Gy of RT). One more dose of docetaxel of 30 mg/m2 was given on day 36 Grade II neutropenia (1050/ml) and grade III platelet toxicity (48,000/ml) were observed 14 days after the second docetaxel dose, while dysphagia grade II appeared once again. After a one-week delay, RT was continued to a total dose of 54 Gy. Liver function tests remained unchanged throughout the treatment. Post-RT CT-scan of the chest and upper abdomen showed complete response of the lung lesion. We suggest that, when docetaxel is chosen to treat cancer patients with HCV-positive hepatic cirrhosis, a starting dose schedule reduced by at least 50% should be considered before escalating to the standard dose.
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PMID:Unexpected toxicity after low-dose docetaxel treatment of a cancer patient with clinically latent HCV-positive hepatic cirrhosis. 1217 50

We evaluated the resection of the papilla of Vater performed in patients with cancer in the papilla of Vater. The subjects were 6 patients who underwent resection of the papilla of Vater between January 1969 and December 2001. The patients aged 57-87 years consisted of 3 males and 3 females. The maximal diameter of the tumors was 0.5 cm in 1 patient, 1.5 cm in 3 patients, and 2.0 cm in 2 patients. Macroscopically, the tumors were of the protruded type (exposed) in 3 patients, of the mixed type (predominant protruded type) in 2 patients, and of the ulcerative type in 1 patient. The histological depth of the tumors was up to the mucosa in 1 patient, up to the oddi in 1 patient, up to the panc0, du1 in 1 patient, up to the panc1, du2 in 1 patient, and unknown in 2 patients. Histologically, the tumors were papillotubular adenocarcinoma (pap-tub) in 4 patients and tubular adenocarcinoma of the well-differentiated type (tub1) in 2 patients. Resection of the papilla of Vater was chosen because of high risk factors such as advanced age in 2 patients, complicated severe cirrhosis and confinement to bed due to poor systemic conditions after intracerebral hemorrhage in 3 patients, and hepatic metastasis observed during surgery in 1 patient. Residual cancer cells around the excised region were positive in 4 patients and unknown in the remaining 2 patients. Of the 6 patients, 5 died within 2 years after surgery, but 1 is alive without symptoms of recurrence 7 years after surgery. The death causes were the primary disease in 3 of the 5 patients. From the viewpoint of radical treatment, resection of the papilla of Vater cannot be chosen as a reduced surgery for cancer in the papilla of Vater. However, resection of the papilla of Vater can be applied to very elderly patients and patients under poor systemic conditions, for whom pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) is considered excessively invasive due to a small diameter of tumor.
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PMID:Evaluation of resection of the papilla of Vater for the treatment of cancer in the papilla of Vater. 1297 Dec 58

Transplantation of organs procured from donors with malignancies identified subsequent to implantation presents a significant dilemma regarding the optimal management strategy to simultaneously minimize the risk for cancer transmission and recipient morbidity. In this report, we present a patient who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation for hepatitis B cirrhosis. The donor had no previous history of cancer. On autopsy, enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes led to the discovery of a 1-cm lung tumor. Histological examination showed pulmonary adenocarcinoma with metastatic mediastinal disease. Despite urgent retransplantation within 7 days, the recipient developed metastatic pulmonary adenocarcinoma diagnosed 11 months after transplantation and died soon thereafter. Analysis of short tandem repeat regions of chromosomal DNA from the recipient, the 2 liver donors, and the posttransplantation tumor corroborates that the first donor was the source of the malignancy. This case of donor-transmitted malignancy underscores the need for vigilance by the procuring surgeon in identifying potential malignancy during organ retrieval and use of a full autopsy on selected donors after organ procurement.
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PMID:Death from donor-transmitted malignancy despite emergency liver retransplantation. 1452 7


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