Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This paper reports 25 kinds of polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies by ABC immunohistochemical technique used for 253 cell smears by fine-needle aspiration. The results were: 1. Immunohistochemical diagnosis were classified into 136 metastatic cancers (K12+ EMA+ CEA+ LCA-), 92 lymphomas (LCA+ K12- EMA- CEA-), 4 mesenchymal tumors (Vimentin+), 3 melanomas (S-100+ NSE+), 15 reactive proliferations (K+ lambda+ CD4+ CD8+) and 3 unspecified. 2. The origin of 70 metastatic cancers were classified into 36 lung (HLC3-AB+), 4 gastrointestinal tract (MG7+), 8 thyroid (TGB+), 1 prostate (PSA+), 3 liver (AFP+) and 14 unknown. 3. Immunologic phenotype of 87 lymphomas were classified into 66 cases of B-cell, 4 T-cell, 3 histiocyte, 7 Hodgkin's diseases and 7 unclear. The above results suggest that immunohistochemical method may be used as a new method of diagnosing and differentiating epithelial and non-epithelial tumors, detecting primary focus of metastatic cancer, differentiating between reactive proliferation and lymphoma and specifying immunologic phenotype of lymphoma in cell smears of fine-needle aspiration.
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical diagnosis in fine-needle aspiration cytology]. 139 59

We report an unusual case of primary cutaneous embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma presenting as a solitary skin lesion on the anterior chest of a 20-month-old child. The tumor was characterized by small, round to oval, poorly differentiated cells. Immunohistochemically, the tumor was negative for NSE, S-100 protein, LCA, and keratin but positive for muscle-specific actin, myoglobin, desmin, and vimentin, thus indicating the presence of myogenous differentiation. Ultrastructural analysis demonstrated thick and thin filaments. Special studies showed no evidence of a primary rhabdomyosarcoma in the patient at a more typical location, nor was there any evidence of metastases.
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PMID:Primary cutaneous rhabdomyosarcoma. 220 84

It is well known that small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has a high propensity to metastasize to the bone marrow and that such involvement has a prognostic significance. A more accurate detection of these bone marrow metastases is thus mandatory. In this study, we analysed the results of the detection of these metastases using an indirect immunofluorescence test. For this purpose, 3 anti-SCLC rat monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) specific for 3 different antigens (LCA1, LCA2, LCA3) have been utilized to examine 59 bone marrow samples from patients at time of diagnosis and 20 samples from chemotherapy treated patients. Eight patients had bone marrow clearly involved by morphological analysis. They all had fluorescent cells recognized at immunodetection with at least 2 MoAbs positive for 7 out of the 8 samples. Fifteen samples, negative by morphological analysis, were proven positive by immunofluorescence. In 12 cases, involvement was detected only by 1 MoAb (6 anti-LCA1, 2 anti-LCA2, 4 anti-LCA3). A correlation was found between the number of samples proven positive by morphological analysis and the number of positive MoAbs for these samples (p less than 0.005). Among the bone marrow samples provided by the 32 limited disease patients, LCA positive cells were detected in 9 (28%) compared to 14 out of the 27 (52%) samples from extensive disease patients (p less than 0.05). We concluded that the indirect immunofluorescence with a panel of MoAbs increases the rate of detection of bone marrow SCLC metastases.
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PMID:Detection of small cell lung cancer bone marrow metastases by immunofluorescence. 283 87

Single-step mutants were isolated from the murine metastatic MDAY-D2 cell line after selection in toxic concentrations of wheat-germ agglutinin. They were partially characterized by measuring their relative level of resistance to WGA, PHA, Con A, RIC, and LCA (Lec phenotype), and by comparing their karyotype and their ability to produce metastases upon transplantation into syngeneic DBA/2 mice. Based on their Lec phenotype, a total of 19 independent isolates were ranked into 10 distinct classes. Among them, two EMS-induced mutants were nontumorigenic (Lec II, Lec III), one nonmetastatic (Lec IV), and one spontaneous mutant (Lec I) failed to produce blood-borne metastases. Other spontaneous mutants belonging to Lec I, Lec II, and other classes were as metastatic as their parents. The Lec IV phenotype was found to segregate independently from metastatic potential in somatic hybrids. Metastatic ability was recovered in mutants expressing the Lec IV phenotype, after further selection for resistance to RIC. Our results strongly suggest that the loss or reduction of the invasive property of tumor cells is associated with only few Lecr1 phenotypes and, therefore, that a restricted number of cell surface glyconjugates are essential for this particular function.
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PMID:Metastatic properties of distinct phenotypic classes of lectin-resistant mutants isolated from murine MDAY-D2 cell line. 659 45

Techniques of production of monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) have provided powerful tools to study biological lung cancer behavior. Immunochemistry is more sensitive than conventional light microscopy examination to detect tumour cells in sputum or pleural effusion, or small cell lung cancer metastases in bone marrow. Immunochemistry is also helpful for the differential diagnosis of carcinoma versus lymphoma or sarcoma, using antibodies directed against antigens such as cytokeratins, vimentin, EMA, LCA, SP100, CEA. In lung cancer, immunochemistry may detect neuroendocrine differentiation, or help to distinguish metastatic carcinoma from primary lung cancer. A positive immunostaining with CEA, Leu-M1, SP1, B72-3 supports the diagnosis of pleural metastatic adenocarcinoma versus mesothelioma. Immunoscintigraphy is a non invasive imaging technique which allows local and distant disease evaluation and could replace in the future the present staging work up. To evaluate the potential therapeutic efficacy of MoAbs in Lung cancer, phase I studies have been performed. Therapeutic effect is based on: 1) indirect cytotoxicity (cells are killed by ADCC or K cells) or direct cytotoxicity (MoAb are carriers of toxins, radioisotopes or drugs). 2) Immune response modulation by anti-idiotypic Ab. 3) Interferences with growth factors. Results of most of phase I trials are disappointing. Improvement of MoAb selectivity, improvement of conjugates stability, reduction of humoral response to MoAb, enhanced tumour localisation, and reduction of nonspecific captation should lead to a better efficacy.
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PMID:[Monoclonal antibodies and bronchial cancer]. 770 64

We present 14 patients with primary sinonasal melanomas (SM) identified from 1984-1997 in our archives (11/14 lateral nose, 1/14 nasal septum, 2/14 paranasal sinuses; 8M/6F, mean age 67.7 years, range 39-88 years). Survival was poor (median 9 months) with death related to extensive local disease and/or widespread hematogenous metastases. The following histological subtypes were identified in descending order: amelanotic small blue cell, pleomorphic, epithelioid, spindle cell and myxoid. High mitotic rate and vascular invasion, absence of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and regression were features shared by all SM. Negative staining of B- and T-cell markers, LCA, neuroendocrine markers such as NSE, chromogranin and synaptophysin, and CK-negativity excluded olfactory neuroblastoma, small cell undifferentiated carcinoma, and lymphoma. S-100 protein was expressed in all SM, but demonstrated variable staining intensity with areas of complete negativity. HMB45 was strongly and uniformly (>80%) expressed in all undifferentiated small blue cell SM. The pigmented SM were predominantly HMB45-negative. The strong HMB45 staining in amelanotic small blue cell SM is explained by the reaction of HMB45 antibody with an oncofetal antigen found in immature melanosomes. In these poorly differentiated amelanotic malignant melanomas, antibody to HMB45 proved to be a superb diagnostic marker. We therefore strongly advocate the inclusion of HMB45 antibody in the panel of antibodies for initial work-up of undifferentiated mucosal neoplasms, since a negative S-100 stain in small biopsy material may result in incorrect classification of these neoplasms.
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PMID:Primary mucosal melanomas of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses. A clinicopathological analysis of 14 cases. 954 30

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.
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PMID:Osteoclast-like giant cell tumor of the pancreas with metastases to gallbladder and lymph nodes. A case report. 977 94

A case of malignant neuroendocrine tumor presenting a huge mediastinal mass controlled with radiation therapy is reported. A thoracotomy was performed on a 57-year-old male and a mass was found to invade the trachea, main bronchus, and left atrium. The tumor was unresectable. Subsequently, cisplatin was administered, but the tumor grew in size and radiation therapy was recommended. The tumor responded well to thoracic irradiation (56 Gy) and disappeared. Three months later, lymph nodes metastases were noted in the retrocrural and upper abdominal paraaortic regions, but these were controlled again with palliative irradiation. Without further treatment, he survived free of disease for over 5 years. Specimens obtained during the thoracotomy showed that the tumor consisted mainly of small round cells with a rosette formation. Immunohistochemically the tumor was positive to NSE and slightly positive to keratin, but negative to LCA, L26, UCLH-1, EMA, Leu7, and chromogranin, suggesting a malignant tumor derived from neuroendocrine tissue.
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PMID:Malignant neuroendocrine tumor presenting a huge mediastinal mass controlled with radiation therapy. 986 8

Leukocyte common antigen (CD45/LCA) and keratin expression are generally mutually exclusive in diagnostic surgical pathology. CD45 reactivity is a reliable indicator of the hematolymphoid nature of a tumor, whereas keratin reactivity is typical of epithelial differentiation (carcinomas and some sarcomas). Some lymphomas, however, might lack detectable CD45 expression, whereas occasional ones might express keratins. CD45 immunoreactivity has been considered exquisitely specific for hematopoietic cells. We report three undifferentiated or neuroendocrine carcinomas that showed membrane-associated immunoreactivity for CD45 in addition to showing distinctive keratin cocktail (AE1/AE3) and epithelial membrane antigen reactivity (all cases); also, keratin 7 was demonstrated in one case and keratin 19 in another. Two cases were lymph node metastases of undifferentiated carcinomas, one of them from the lungs and the other of an unknown origin; the former case showed neuroendocrine features. The third case represented a pulmonary large-cell undifferentiated carcinoma. These cases were negative for lineage-specific leukocyte antigens and did not show clonal immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangements. Electron microscopic studies demonstrated desmosomes and keratin-like tonofilaments in all three cases, thus confirming the epithelial nature of these tumors. The exceptional membrane staining for CD45 seen in these undifferentiated carcinomas might be comparable to experimentally detected incorporation of leukocyte antigens into the cell membranes of nonleukocytic cells in a leukocyte-rich environment. This rare diagnostic pitfall should be considered in the diagnostic surgical pathology of undifferentiated tumors. It is best avoided by employing a panel of leukocyte and epithelial antigens and by use of electron microscopy, if possible.
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PMID:CD45 (leukocyte common antigen) immunoreactivity in metastatic undifferentiated and neuroendocrine carcinoma: a potential diagnostic pitfall. 987 53

A case of retroperitoneal angiosarcoma in a woman 39 years of age is reported. The tumor presented with inguinal (right) and iliac (left) lymph node metastases and a mass protruding under the left vaginal wall. The unusual morphology of the tumor demanded special immunohistochemical investigation (factor 8, CD 31, CD 34, pancytokeratin 20, LCA, S100, cytokeratin 7, CEA, MU1, HMB 45 and melan A) which confirmed the diagnosis of epithelioid angiosarcoma. The problems in the differential diagnosis and therapeutic approach are discussed.
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PMID:Retroperitoneal epithelioid angiosarcoma presenting with lymph node metastases. Clinicopathological study of an extremely rare tumor. 1119 45


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