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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nine vulvar and three vaginal angiomyofibroblastomas from patients 23 to 71 years of age (mean, 46 yr) were analyzed. The tumors were well circumscribed and ranged from 0.9 to 11 cm (average, 4.7 cm) in maximal dimension. On microscopic examination, they had hypercellular and hypocellular areas. The neoplastic cells were spindle-shaped, plasmacytoid, or epithelioid; a variable number were binucleated or multinucleated cells. A focal storiform pattern was present in one tumor, and, in one tumor, the neoplastic cells formed a collar around a central area of dense collagen. There was no significant nuclear atypia, and there was less than one mitotic figure per 10 high-power fields. The tumors contained small- to medium-sized blood vessels, which were characteristically thin walled and, occasionally, ectatic and branching. The stroma was edematous, separated collagen fibers and contained a variable number of inflammatory cells, especially lymphocytes and mast cells. Three vulvar tumors contained a variable amount of fat. Ultrastructural study of three tumors showed intracytoplasmic, dilated, rough endoplasmic reticulum, moderate numbers of pinocytotic vesicles, and numerous filaments without dense bodies; rare intercellular rudimentary junctions were identified. Eleven of 11 tumors were immunoreactive for vimentin, 11 of 12 for desmin, three of 11 for muscle actin, one of 12 for smooth muscle actin, and four of 12 for CD34. There was no staining for factor XIIIa, keratin, S100 protein, Leu-7, glial fibrillary acidic protein, or
CD68
. Follow-up revealed no recurrences or
metastases
. Angiomyofibroblastoma is a distinctive benign tumor that arises most commonly in the vulva and vagina and has a diverse histologic and immunohistochemical profile.
...
PMID:Angiomyofibroblastoma of the vulva and vagina. 868 29
Five children with congenital-infantile fibrosarcoma are analyzed. The tumor was found at birth in four children: in one patient it was recognized at the age of 7 months. In three children the tumor affected the lower extremity. In one patient the inguinal region was the primary site, in another the abdominal wall. The morphology was that of a highly cellular spindle cell sarcoma with cells arranged in a fascicular pattern. Variations of this common pattern such as a cartwheel arrangement, and foci of small oval cells were observed. The immunohistochemistry revealed positivity of vimentin in four investigated tumors and muscle specific actin in three. Desmin, sarcomeric actin and myoglobin were all negative. There were scattered cells positive with KP1 (
CD68
), MAC 387, and in one case, with factor XIIIa antibodies which were considered to be reactive rather than tumor cells. The flow cytometry study showed DNA content in three tumors within diploid range; one tumor was hyperdiploid with the DNA index 1.2. Three children are disease-free from nine to 21 years after the diagnosis. One of them had the tumor preoperatively irradiated, and the subsequent histological examination revealed an almost complete tumor necrosis. In one patient there were six recurrences (treated by surgery only), and the child is well 25 months after the last recurrence. In one child the disease had an unusually aggressive course, and the patient died of widespread
metastases
to the lungs, lymph nodes and bones.
...
PMID:Congenital-infantile fibrosarcoma: a clinicopathological study of five patients entered on the Prague children's tumor registry. 889 21
The pathological features of 11 nodules of early hepatocellular carcinoma (EHCC) were studied. Their macroscopic features resembled those of adenomatous hyperplasia and differed from those of advanced hepatocellular carcinomas (AHCC). The EHCC extended along the hepatic lobular structure and lacked expansive growth. The endothelial cells in the sinusoids of EHCC did not react to Ulex europaeus agglutinin 1 (UEA1) like adenomatous hyperplasia or other liver parenchyma, whereas the endothelial cells in the AHCC did react to UEA1. Immunohistochemically,
CD68
-positive Kupffer cells were noted in the sinusoids of EHCC, whereas in the AHCC Kupffer cells were not seen. Tumor emboli in the portal vein and intrahepatic
metastases
were not identified in EHCC, which seemed to be carcinoma-in-situ or a microinvasive stage of hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Early hepatocellular carcinoma macroscopically resembling adenomatous hyperplasia: pathological resemblance to carcinoma-in-situ. 905 92
We evaluated the occurrence, tissue distribution, and prognostic value of tumor-associated macrophages in 121 papillary thyroid carcinomas using immunohistochemical staining with anti-
CD68
antibody in archival paraffin-embedded sections. Lymphocytic infiltration and dendritic cell presence were also evaluated. Three groups were identified according to the presence and characteristics of macrophages: 1) tumors without evidence of infiltrating macrophages: (n = 35); 2) tumors with infiltrating macrophages but no evidence of neoplastic cells phagocytosis (n = 68); and 3) tumors with infiltrating macrophages and in situ evidence of active neoplastic cell phagocytosis (n = 18). Neoplastic cell phagocytosis by macrophages was positively correlated with both lymphocytic infiltration and dendritic cells (P = 0.0000), whereas it was negatively correlated with vascular invasion (P = 0.0032). Distant
metastases
developed in none of the 18 tumors with neoplastic cell phagocytosis, but occurred in 15 of 103 of the remaining tumors (P = 0.0647) and were significantly and negatively associated with lymphocytic infiltration or dendritic cells. The present study indicates, therefore, that immune reaction, involving neoplastic cell phagocytosis by macrophages and lymphocytic infiltration, plays a role in the development of distant
metastases
in patients with papillary thyroid cancer.
...
PMID:In situ evidence of neoplastic cell phagocytosis by macrophages in papillary thyroid cancer. 914 59
We report 51 cases of a previously undescribed tumor of the distal extremities that is often mistaken for an inflammatory or infectious process, Hodgkin's disease, or various sarcomas. These lesions developed in patients of all ages (range, 4-81 yr; median, 40 yr) and affected the sexes nearly equally (27 men, 24 women). They presented as a painless mass of the fingers (14 cases), hand (11 cases), wrist or arm (10 cases), toe or foot (8 cases), or lower leg (5 cases), usually within the subcutaneous tissues. Grossly, they were infiltrative, multinodular masses characterized by a dense chronic inflammatory infiltrate that merged with a stroma, which varied from densely hyaline to focally myxoid and contained sheets of short spindled to rounded epithelioid cells. Focally, the epithelioid cells were extremely large with bizarre, vesicular nuclei and macronucleoli resembling Reed-Sternberg cells or virocytes. Despite the level of atypia, mitotic activity was low. The tumor cells consistently expressed vimentin but lacked a variety of other mesenchymal, epithelial markers, e.g., S100 protein, desmin, actin, neuron-specific endolase, epithelial membrane antigen, HMB-45, CD34) and leukocyte markers (CD15, CD30, CD45). Keratin was noted focally and weakly in four cases and
CD68
focally in six cases, the latter suggesting that the cells had acquired phagocytic properties. Immunostains for cytomegalovirus were negative. Polymerase chain reaction for Epstein-Barr virus showed amplification levels consistent with latent infection in 4 of 10 cases, but no cases showed levels consistent with active infection. All of the bacterial and viral cultures were negative. Follow-up information was available in 27 cases. Recurrences developed in six patients (interval, 15 mo-10 yr), but there were no
metastases
or tumor-related deaths. In one patient, progressive proximal extension up the arm was noted. Although the most common submitting diagnosis was that of an inflammatory or infectious process, the negative studies for infectious agents, clinical behavior with local recurrences, immunophenotypic profile, and cytologic atypia support the idea that these are unusual mesenchymal neoplasms with at least the potential for local recurrence. It remains to be investigated whether with time these lesions will prove to have metastatic potential.
...
PMID:Inflammatory myxohyaline tumor of distal extremities with virocyte or Reed-Sternberg-like cells: a distinctive lesion with features simulating inflammatory conditions, Hodgkin's disease, and various sarcomas. 957 90
Seventy-three cases of malignant, atypical, and multicentric granular cell tumors of soft tissue were studied to clarify criteria for malignancy and prognostic factors. Six histologic criteria were assessed: necrosis, spindling, vesicular nuclei with large nucleoli, increased mitotic activity (> 2 mitoses/10 high-power fields at 200x magnification), high nuclear to cytoplasmic (N:C) ratio, and pleomorphism. Neoplasms that met three or more of these criteria were classified as histologically malignant; those that met one or two criteria were classified as atypical; and those that displayed only focal pleomorphism but fulfilled none of the other criteria were classified as benign. Hence, 46 cases were classified as histologically malignant, 21 as atypical (3 were multicentric), and 6 as benign (all were multicentric). The patients with benign multicentric and atypical granular cell tumors had no
metastases
and there were no tumor deaths. In contrast, 11 of 28 patients (39%) with malignant granular cell tumor with follow-up information died of disease at a median interval of 3 years; 8 of 28 (29%) were alive with disease, and 9/28 (32%) were disease free (median intervals, 2 and 7 years, respectively). There were local recurrences in 9 of 28 malignant cases (32%) and
metastases
in 14 of 28 (50%) (median intervals, each 2 years). Forty-eight cases were studied immunohistochemically; 100% expressed vimentin, 98% S-100 protein, 98% neuron-specific enolase, 69% CD57, and 65%
CD68
. Alpha-smooth muscle actin, desmin, epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), cytokeratins (with CAM 5.2 and KL-1), chromogranin, and HMB45 were not detected. The proliferative index with Ki67 (MIB 1) was 10-50% in 14 of 25 malignant tumors (56%), and immunostaining for p53 was detected in 50% or more of tumor cells in 17 of 25 (68%); both of these factors were statistically significant with regard to the histologic classification as benign, atypical, or malignant. Ultrastructural examination of 13 benign, atypical, and malignant granular cell tumors showed engorgement of the cytoplasm with complex granules and lysosomes, as well as Schwannian features. By flow cytometric DNA analysis, two of six malignant tumors were aneuploid, two were hyperdiploid, and two were diploid. One atypical tumor was aneuploid and all 11 benign tumors were either diploid (9 cases) or hyperdiploid (2 cases). Statistically significant adverse prognostic factors with regard to survival included local recurrence, metastasis, larger tumor size, older patient age, histologic classification as malignant, presence of necrosis, increased mitotic activity, spindling of tumor cells, vesicular nuclei with large nucleoli, and Ki67 values greater [corrected] than 10%. This study defines clinical and morphologic criteria for malignancy in granular cell tumors and shows that malignant granular cell tumor is a high-grade sarcoma with a high rate of
metastases
and a short survival.
...
PMID:Malignant granular cell tumor of soft tissue: diagnostic criteria and clinicopathologic correlation. 966 41
Twenty patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma were treated with a single infusion (400 mg) of a mouse monoclonal antibody (IgG2a) against the tumor-associated antigen CO 17-1A and with a daily injection of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) for 10 days. The cycle was repeated every month.
Metastases
from 5 of the 20 patients biopsied on days 1 and 10 of the first two treatment cycles were studied by immunohistochemistry. During treatment, neutrophils, monocytes, and T lymphocytes increased concordantly in the tumor as in the blood of the individual patient. Macrophages (
CD68
) and CD8+ T cells infiltrated the tumor glands and displayed TIA-1-reactive cytotoxic granules. Neutrophils were seen mainly in areas of necrosis. Activated (HLA-DR+) CD4+ T cells were usually abundant in the stroma. During treatment, few natural killer cells were found in the tumor, contrary to the marked increase seen in blood. Our observations indicate that GM-CSF markedly recruited activated, tumor-infiltrating leukocytes, possibly representing antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and cytotoxic T effector cells. The notion that combined antibody and GM-CSF therapy may also promote a T-cell antitumor response is further supported and advocated by our findings. The study lends further support to combining GM-CSF with monoclonal antibody-based therapy.
...
PMID:Immunopathology of metastases in patients of colorectal carcinoma treated with monoclonal antibody 17-1A and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor. 971 20
Osteoclast-like giant cell tumor of the pancreas (OGTP) is a rare neoplasm, of which the histogenesis is still controversial. Here we report a case of OGTP involving the head of the pancreas in a 71-year-old woman with
metastases
to the gallbladder and lymph nodes. The primary and metastatic tumors had identical histopathological, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural and molecular biological features. Microscopically, the tumors were characterized by atypical, often pleomorphic mononuclear cells associated with the proliferation of benign-appearing osteoclast-like giant cells (OGCs). Electron microscopic observation provided ultrastructural evidence of epithelial differentiation of the mononuclear cells, including microvilli and desmosomes, which was not obtained for OGCs. On immunohistochemical study, OGCs stained for
CD68
(KP-1), LCA and HAM56, whereas mononuclear cells only reacted with PCNA. These findings clearly suggest that mononuclear cells are capable of differentiation and proliferation and may have been the only true tumor cells in this neoplasm, and that OGCs may have been a paraneoplastic product of this rare tumor. On examination of DNA from dewaxed sections of the tumor, we found no p53 mutation in the tumor tissue, but found two K-ras mutations in codon 12; this pattern of mutation commonly occurs in pancreatic carcinoma, indicating a somewhat genetic relationship of OGTP to pancreatic carcinoma. Although OGTP often has a favorable prognosis, the outcome in the present case was poor due to early tumor spread, with less than two years postoperative survival.
...
PMID:Osteoclast-like giant cell tumor of the pancreas with metastases to gallbladder and lymph nodes. A case report. 977 94
Urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) plays a pivotal role in tissue degradation during tumor spread and metastasis. We have quantitated u-PA in tissue homogenates of 31 serous ovarian tumors and localized u-PA and its mRNA in tissue sections of 26 serous ovarian tumors. The content of u-PA was higher in malignant than in benign tumors, with the highest levels being found in poorly differentiated cancers. In tissue sections, the u-PA mRNA was hybridized with a radiolabeled RNA probe. Signals were almost exclusively found in the epithelium in benign and borderline tumors and in well-differentiated cancers. Poorly differentiated tumors and
metastases
exhibited prominent stromal expression of u-PA mRNA, whereas epithelial expression was weak or absent. Immuno-histochemical staining co-localized u-PA antigen with its mRNA in the epithelium of benign and borderline tumors and in well-differentiated cancers. Poorly differentiated malignant tumors showed extensive immunostaining in the epithelium in addition to stromal staining. The u-PA mRNA-expressing and u-PA-immunostained cells in the stroma were not tumor cells since no cells in the stroma were positive for cytokeratin. Poorly differentiated tumors had increased numbers of stromal macrophages (
CD68
), and they co-localized with some of the u-PA-positive cells. The presence of u-PA antigen and the absence of u-PA mRNA in tumor epithelium of poorly differentiated tumors and
metastases
together with the presence of u-PA mRNA in the stroma suggests production in stromal cells and subsequent binding to receptor sites in tumor cells.
...
PMID:High tissue content of urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) is associated with high stromal expression of u-PA mRNA in poorly differentiated serous ovarian carcinoma. 984 66
An autopsy case of cardiac leiomyosarcoma and its pulmonary metastasis, both with osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells (OMGC) mimicking the so-called giant cell variant of malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH), is reported. The patient, a 70-year-old male, was admitted for sudden dyspnea. Extensive work-up established only a left atrial tumor mass. Three months after admission, the patient developed multiple intracranial and pulmonary
metastases
, followed by a worsening clinical course characterized by semicoma and dyspnea, and subsequently died 6 months after the onset of his symptoms. At subsequent autopsy, the left atrial polypoid tumor was found to have invaded destructively to the left half of the cardiac wall. Histology of the cardiac tumor revealed a bimorphic sarcoma in which a poorly differentiated leiomyosarcoma comfirmed by histologic and immunohistochemical findings was juxtaposed to a small nodule with features closely mimicking giant cell MFH. The pulmonary metastatic nodules exhibited features that were entirely indistinguishable from giant cell MFH except for the fact that a minority of polymorphic cells manifested myogenic differentiation. We believe that such a MFH-like pattern represents a pleomorphic form of leiomyosarcoma rather than a dedifferentiated one. The OMGC within the MFH-like component coexpressed
CD68
and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity.
...
PMID:Leiomyosarcoma of the heart and its pulmonary metastasis, both with prominent osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells expressing tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity. 1022 28
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