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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
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103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight cases of leiomyosarcoma with osteoclast-like giant cells, arising in deep soft tissue, and that mimicked closely the "giant cell variant of malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH)," have been studied morphologically and immunohistochemically. The age of the patients ranged from 7 to 88 years (mean, 66.2 years; median, 74 years); five were female patients. Three lesions arose in the lower limbs, two in the buttock, and one each in the shoulder, chest wall, and the floor of the mouth. Follow-up in one case revealed a local recurrence and in two cases systemic
metastases
. All cases showed, at least focally, interwoven spindle cell fascicles, with the cytologic features of smooth muscle cells, as well as strong positivity for alpha-smooth-muscle actin, muscle actin, and
desmin
. The morphologically benign osteoclast-like giant cells expressed CD68 but failed to stain with myogenic markers. The association of leiomyosarcoma with prominent osteoclast-like giant cells is not as uncommon as generally believed, being evident in 8.7% of the deep-seated nonvisceral leiomyosarcomas that we have studied. These results provide good evidence for myogenic differentiation in at least a subset of those tumors with morphologic features currently classified as the giant cell variant of MFH. Considering that at least some other reported cases of giant cell MFH appear to be a variant of extraskeletal osteosarcoma, we would suggest that lesions with this distinctive pattern should be more carefully classified according to their apparent line of differentiation.
...
PMID:Leiomyosarcoma with prominent osteoclast-like giant cells. Analysis of eight cases closely mimicking the so-called giant cell variant of malignant fibrous histiocytoma. 769 55
A 63-year-old black man of Caribbean origin, seropositive for human T-cell lymphoma virus type I (HTLV-I), presented with a 4-week history of progressive dyspnea, and was found to have a tumor of the anterior mediastinum. Incisional biopsy revealed a malignant neoplasm with a solid pattern of glycogen-rich clear cells. Diffuse expression of vimentin was observed, whereas only rare cells were immunoreactive for muscle-specific actin and
desmin
. Ultrastructure revealed a large amount of mono-particulate glycogen in most cells and features of rhabdomyogenic differentiation in occasional cells. The autopsy revealed a 23 x 14-cm (1,345 g), soft and white mediastinal neoplasm bulging in the right thorax with right pleural
metastases
. HTLV-1 proviral genome was not detected within tumor cells by polymerase chain reaction. This rhabdomyosarcoma is best classified as the solid subtype of the alveolar variant, with an unusually large amount of cytoplasmic glycogen. Clear cell rhabdomyosarcoma could be potentially confused with more commonly encountered clear cell tumors, particularly in the mediastinum.
...
PMID:Glycogen-rich clear cell rhabdomyosarcoma of the mediastinum. Potential diagnostic pitfall. 811 99
Four cases are presented of primary anterior mediastinal tumors in young adults that were characterized by solid, infiltrative lesions showing histologic and immunohistochemical features of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. The patients were three men and one woman between 19 and 27 years of age (mean age, 23 years). All patients presented with symptoms referable to their tumors, including cough, chest pain, dyspnea, and left-sided pleural effusion. Grossly and radiographically, the lesions were characterized by their solid, infiltrative appearance. Histologically, two cases corresponded to the solid variant of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, one case was an embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma with a predominant spindle cell component, and the remaining case showed the features of a pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma. No glandular, epithelial, or other component could be identified in any of the tumors on extensive sampling. Immunohistochemical studies showed positive staining of the tumor cells with actin,
desmin
, and vimentin antibodies, with focal positivity for myoglobin in three cases and focal positive staining with S-100 protein in one case. Stains for low and high molecular weight keratin, carcinoembryonic antigen, alpha-fetoprotein, human chorionic gonadotropin, placental alkaline phosphatase, leukocyte-common antigen, and neuron-specific enolase were negative. All patients experienced rapid recurrence and
metastases
within the first 6 months after diagnosis. Three patients died within this period due to their tumors; the fourth patient has been lost to follow-up. Pure primary rhabdomyosarcomas of the anterior mediastinum are highly aggressive neoplasms that should be distinguished from germ cell, teratomatous, or carcinosarcomatous tumors with a focal rhabdomyoblastic component.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcomas of the anterior mediastinum: report of four cases unassociated with germ cell, teratomatous, or thymic carcinomatous components. 816 67
We report a case of a primary renal primitive neuroectodermal tumour in a 24-year-old man associated with multiple pulmonary
metastases
. Histologically, the bulk of the kidney was replaced by a small round-cell tumour with numerous true Homer-Wright rosettes and perivascular pseudorosettes; wide-spread vascular invasion was noted. There was no evidence at autopsy of a primary tumour elsewhere. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells stained strongly positive for O-13, a monoclonal antibody, which recognizes a recently described cell membrane glycoprotein (p30/32MIC2), more weakly for NSE and at least focally for PGP 9.5; the tumour did not stain for other neural markers, cytokeratin, leucocyte common antigen, or
desmin
. The differential diagnosis of small round-cell tumours in this location and the relation of primitive neuroectodermal tumours and Ewing's sarcoma are discussed.
...
PMID:[Primary primitive neuroectodermal tumor of the kidney in an adult. Clinico-pathologic and immunohistochemical case report]. 797
Nine smooth muscle tumours, arising at a variety of sites and showing granular cell change of their cytoplasm, have been studied morphologically and immunohistochemically. The age of the patients ranged from 6 to 78 years (median 42 years); seven patients were female. Two tumours each arose in the dermis or subcutaneous tissue while the other five cases were situated in deeper soft tissue. Three of the lesions arose in the lower limbs, two in the pelvis and one each in the regions of the elbow, shoulder, breast and buttock. Follow-up in eight patients was available and revealed local recurrence in three and pulmonary
metastases
in two cases. All cases showed at least focally the light microscopic features of a smooth muscle tumour and demonstrated moderate to strong positivity for alpha-smooth muscle actin. Five were also HHF-35 positive and three were
desmin
positive. Noteworthy was strong positivity for the 'melanoma associated' antigen NKI/C3 in all cases. Six cases stained also weakly positive for NSE, but all were S-100 protein negative. The former is not specific but is the most reliable marker of lesions showing granular cell change. Granular cytoplasmic change represents simply a cytological phenotype, apparently representing a characteristic metabolic alteration, not exclusively associated with Schwann cell tumours. Tumours containing granular cells are best classified according to their line of specific cellular differentiation if possible.
...
PMID:Granular cell change in smooth muscle tumours of skin and soft tissue. 820 Jun 24
Alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPS) was described as a distinct entity in 1952. ASPS mainly affects young adults, with a slight prevalence of female patients. It arises in the extremities, trunk, and head and neck region.
Metastases
are frequent and are mainly localized to lungs, brain, and bone. Local recurrences are rare if the primary tumor is completely excised. Adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy are not useful. Death eventually supervenes, after several years, in most of the patients. Histogenesis and differentiation of ASPS, since its first description, have remained a matter of controversy. Many hypotheses have been taken into consideration, among which neural and muscular differentiation are the most plausible. The finding that intracytoplasmic crystals, present in most of the cases, are composed of actin, and the immunocytochemical localization in ASPS of several muscular markers, such as actin (skeletal and smooth muscle actin),
desmin
, and MyoD1 are all features that point towards skeletal muscle differentiation.
...
PMID:Alveolar soft-part sarcoma: a new type of rhabdomyosarcoma? 820 47
Rarely, rhabdomyosarcoma can present with bone pain and bone lesions on radiographs without evidence of a primary tumor. Of 428 children with biopsy-proven rhabdomyosarcoma, four presented with radiographic evidence of bone metastases, but no primary tumor was found on subsequent evaluation. On radiographs, these
metastases
, located most commonly in the metaphyses of the extremities and in the spine, displayed a destructive or diffusely permeative pattern without sclerotic margins and mimicked the more common neuroblastoma. One patient also had diaphyseal cortical lytic
metastases
of the tibia. Radiographs defined
metastases
of the extremities better than the correlative bone scans. In the spine, on T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images,
metastases
displayed high signal intensity which contrasted with the low-signal-intensity marrow in these pediatric patients. On histopathologic examination, metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma was composed of small cells of variable size, shape, and growth pattern similar to other round cell tumors. A positive
desmin
immunohistochemical test helped to establish the diagnosis. The radiologist, pathologist, and clinician should be aware of this unusual presentation of rhabdomyosarcoma so that suitable immunohistochemical tests are performed and appropriate chemotherapy given.
...
PMID:Bone metastases as the presenting manifestation of rhabdomyosarcoma in childhood. 824 17
Two cases of pleomorphic sarcoma with malignant fibrous histiocytoma phenotype that recurred following therapy with a distinctly different, more mature histologic appearance and immunohistochemical profile are reported. The first case recurred predominantly as extraosseous osteosarcoma at the same site 17 months after wide local excision. The second case recurred as widespread pulmonary, mediastinal, and hepatic
metastatic disease
5 years after wide local excision and adjuvant local radiotherapy and chemotherapy with doxorubicin hydrochloride (Adriamycin) and cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan). Fine-needle aspiration of the pulmonary metastatic lesions showed predominantly spindle cells without any large, pleomorphic giant cells typical of malignant fibrous histiocytoma. The patient was treated by radiotherapy to the lung and mediastinum and by chemotherapy with ifosfamide and mesna. Biopsy of a metastatic scrotal skin nodule 9 months later showed a malignant spindle cell lesion with the histologic appearance and immunohistochemical phenotype of leiomyosarcoma. Retrospective immunohistochemical evaluation of the primary tumor showed focal
desmin
expression, suggesting focal leiomyosarcomatous differentiation. However, the large proportion of the primary tumor had the phenotype of malignant fibrous histiocytoma. These two cases illustrate an unusual finding of "differentiation" rather than "dedifferentiation" in a recurrent sarcoma. The transformation to osteosarcoma and differentiated leiomyosarcoma demonstrates the potential for phenotypic changes in soft-tissue sarcomas and suggests that the malignant fibrous histiocytoma phenotype and more-differentiated sarcomas such as extraosseous osteosarcoma or leiomyosarcoma are related in a common pathway in differentiation from a primitive mesenchymal stem cell.
...
PMID:Malignant fibrous histiocytoma phenotype in pleomorphic sarcoma differentiation in recurrent disease. 784 56
The case records of 2 patients recently treated at our medical centers with prostatic cystic epithelial-stromal tumor (ages 22 and 62 years), as well as 14 cases previously reported in the literature were reviewed to obtain a consensus as to the therapy for this uncommon malignancy. Patients with prostatic cystic epithelial-stromal tumor often present with obstructive voiding symptoms and a palpable suprapubic mass. Computerized tomography typically reveals a huge, complex retrovesical mass with displacement of surrounding pelvic and abdominal structures, which may invade locally into the bladder, ureters or rectal wall. Our experience with immunohistochemical staining of these tumors suggests an epithelial component that is positive for prostate specific antigen, prostatic acid phosphatase, epithelial membrane antigen, chorioembryonic antigen and cytokeratin, and a stromal component that is positive for vimentin,
desmin
, cytokeratin and myosin. Rapid recurrences are the rule in patients in whom the tumor is incompletely resected. Histological evidence of malignant transformation and distant
metastases
has been reported in these neoplasms. An aggressive surgical approach aimed at total removal of this pelvic tumor will be discussed.
...
PMID:Prostatic cystic epithelial-stromal tumors: a report of 2 new cases. 838 73
A rare case of the leiomyomatous variant of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma is reported. A 13-year-old boy presented with a recurrent painless mass on the ventral side of the right forefoot. Microscopically, the tumor consisted of spindle-shaped and round tumor cells in a fascicular or storiform, focally hemangiopericytoma-like growth pattern. The cytoplasm of the spindle-shaped tumor cells was eosinophilic and fibrillary, in some areas resembling smooth muscle cells. Immunohistologically, all tumor cells were vimentin-positive, most of them also stained with antibodies to
desmin
and muscle specific actin (MSA). In addition, many tumor cells showed a co-expression of alpha-sarcomeric actin and myoglobin. All tumor cells were negative with alpha-smooth muscle actin. Two years after surgical treatment and chemotherapy the patient is well with no evidence of distant
metastases
. The clinicopathological features and differential diagnostic problems are discussed.
...
PMID:Spindle cell (leiomyomatous) rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare variant of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. 851 10
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