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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The majority of patients with colorectal cancer present at a stage when the primary cancer can be resected with curative intent. However, despite the high resectability rate, about 30-50% of these patients subsequently develop metastatic disease. In these patients, neoplastic cells were disseminated either before or during surgery of the primary cancer. Due to the lack of appropriate detection systems, the extent of pre- and intraoperative hematogenic tumor cell dissemination has not yet been determined. Using a reverse transcription-PCR assay to amplify cytokeratin 20 transcripts, we were able to detect 10 colorectal cancer cells in 10 ml of blood. Blood samples were taken from 65 patients undergoing resection of primary colorectal cancer or liver metastasis of colorectal cancer pre-, intra-, and postoperatively. Circulating tumor cells were detected in 24 of 58 patients with colorectal resections in correlation to the tumor stage and in 6 of 7 patients who underwent hemihepatectomy for liver metastasis. In 8 of 58 patients with colorectal resection and in 5 of 7 patients with hemihepatectomy, tumor cells could only be detected during or during and after surgery. These results demonstrate that hematogenic tumor cell dissemination is a frequent and early event in colorectal cancer. Surgery enhances the release of tumor cells into the circulation. The long-term follow-up of our patient cohort will provide data on the prognostic relevance of circulating tumor cells and might lead to new therapeutic concepts for perioperative prophylaxis of tumor cell implantation or postoperative adjuvant therapy regimens.
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PMID:Dissemination of tumor cells in patients undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer. 951 21

To discriminate adenocarcinoma metastases originating from either colon or ovary, a panel of immunohistochemical markers was evaluated. For this purpose, paraffin sections from 157 primary and metastatic colonic and ovarian carcinomas were immunostained. These cases were divided into a learning group of 46 colonic and 54 ovarian carcinomas and a test group of 29 colonic and 28 ovarian carcinomas, including all metastatic tumors, among which were five with unknown primary site at the time of testing. The sections were immunostained with antibodies against carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), CA125, vimentin, and CA19.9. Staining results were expressed as the product of staining intensity and percentage of positive tumor cells. Stepwise discriminant analysis was applied on the learning set to obtain a classification function for both tumors. The validity of the classification function was evaluated using the test set. There was considerable overlap in immunostaining for both tumor types, but colonic carcinomas were typically positive for CEA and CK20 and negative for CK7 and CA125. Ovarian carcinomas were typically positive for CK7 and CA125 and negative for CEA and CK20. In discriminant analysis, the best combination of markers appeared to be CK7 and CEA. Only one sample of the test group (2%) was misclassified. Taking learning and test groups together, 136 of the 157 samples (87%) were correctly classified with high posterior probability (PP > .8). However, from the 28 mucinous ovarian carcinomas, only 19 (68%) could correctly be classified with high PP. When excluding the nonmucinous ovarian carcinomas from the analysis, overall 87 of 103 (84.5%) of the samples were correctly classified (PP > .8) with a combination of CEA, CK7, and also vimentin. From the 28 mucinous ovarian carcinomas, only two (7%) were misclassified, and four could not be classified with sufficient certainty. In neither analysis did CK20, CA125, or CA19.9 emerge as discriminatory parameters. Based on the same data, an intuitive flow chart was constructed with which 129 of 157 cases could be classified (only one falsely) without further statistical analysis. The five metastases with an at first unknown primary could, according to the follow-up, all be classified correctly with high PP. Most ovarian carcinomas, including the mucinous ones, can be discriminated with high probability from colonic carcinomas using a panel of three antibodies directed against CEA, cytokeratin 7, and vimentin.
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PMID:Tracing the origin of adenocarcinomas with unknown primary using immunohistochemistry: differential diagnosis between colonic and ovarian carcinomas as primary sites. 959 73

Four unusual cases of primary mammary mucinous cystadenocarcinoma composed predominantly of tall columnar cells with abundant intracytoplasmic mucin are reported; they were multicystic and appeared virtually identical to mucinous cystadenocarcinomas of the ovary and pancreas. Three of the women were white and one was black, they ranged in age from 49 to 67 years (average 58), and they had tumors that ranged from 0.8 to 19 cm in diameter. Microscopically, the tumors were characterized by cystic spaces lined by predominantly bland-appearing columnar mucinous cells with stratification, tufting, and papillary formations. Varying degrees of cytologic atypia were focally evident, with gradual loss of the intracytoplasmic mucin and transformation to an eosinophilic squamoid cell population. Multifocal invasion generally emanated from these eosinophilic, squamoid areas in all cases. All four tumors displayed immunoreactivity for MIB-1 (Ki-67) in a relatively high percentage of cells and failed to show immunoreactivity for estrogen receptors and progesterone receptors. All four stained positively with cytokeratin 7 (CK7) but were negative with cytokeratin 20 (CK20). Mastectomy and axillary lymph node dissection were performed in three cases and lumpectomy with lymph node dissection in the remaining case. Lymph node metastases, identified in only one patient, retained the distinctive morphology. Three of the patients are alive without evidence of disease 11, 22, and 24 months after the diagnosis; the fourth is a recent case. These tumors are a rare, clinicopathologically distinct type of primary breast carcinoma that should be distinguished from typical mucinous (colloid) carcinomas of the breast and, more importantly, metastases from other sites.
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PMID:Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma of the breast. 963 Jan 76

Peripheral pulmonary adenocarcinomas (PPAs) often demonstrate a bronchioloalveolar component, with or without glandular differentiation. PPAs can be nondescript, mucinous, or show features of Type II pneumocytes. Particularly, mucinous lung carcinomas can resemble gastrointestinal metastases. Previous reports suggested that patterns of keratins 7 (K7) and 20 (K20) differ in pulmonary tumors versus enteric metastases. These studies, however, often failed to specify the precise morphotypes of PPA. Thus, we undertook this evaluation of PPAs with different histologic images. Thirty-nine cases were retrieved from institutional files; all were confirmed as primary tumors by clinicopathologic and radiographic review. Cases were classified as Type I (mucinous) bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC1); Type II (nonmucinous) bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC2); conventional PPA with BAC1-like areas (PPA1); or conventional PPA with BAC2-like foci (PPA2). Immunostains were performed for K7, K20, carcinoembryonic antigen, CA19-9, tumor-associated glycoprotein-72, surfactant apoprotein-A, and the c-erbB-2 peptide. BAC1 and PPA1 failed to express surfactant apoprotein-A, and BAC2 also consistently lacked K20, whereas 28% of PPA2 lesions were labeled for K20. All of the other determinants, however, were seen in variable proportions in each subgroup of PPA. Primary BAC1 and PPA1 resembled enteric adenocarcinomas immunophenotypically; on the other hand, BAC2 demonstrated a pattern of protein expression similar to that of Type II pneumocytes. PPA2s are a diverse group of neoplasms, and a subset of PPA2 does show K20 reactivity, as would be expected in metastatic enteric carcinomas. Thus, immunohistochemical data on PPAs must be interpreted carefully and only in clinicopathologic context. With respect specifically to primary pulmonary mucinous tumors, there still seems to be no uniformly reliably marker that will always allow the exclusion of metastatic enteric tumors.
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PMID:Peripheral pulmonary adenocarcinomas with bronchioloalveolar features: immunophenotypes correlate with histologic patterns. 964 95

Five cases of ovarian metastases of intestinal adenocarcinomas that suggested the diagnosis of clear cell adenocarcinoma or the secretory variant of endometrioid carcinoma of the ovary are reported. Patient age ranged from 27 to 71 years at the time of diagnosis of the ovarian neoplasms. In four, the ovarian and intestinal tumors were discovered synchronously, and, in the fifth, the ovarian metastasis occurred 1 year after the intestinal primary was diagnosed. The ovarian tumors were unilateral in three patients and bilateral in two. They were up to 18 cm (mean, 12 cm) in maximum dimension and were characterized on microscopic evaluation by glands and cysts lined by cells whose most striking feature was abundant clear cytoplasm. In two cases, striking subnuclear or supranuclear vacuoles were present. An important clue to the diagnosis of metastatic intestinal adenocarcinoma was the presence in all cases of "dirty necrosis." The metastatic nature of the ovarian tumors was supported by the immunohistochemical findings. All tumors stained were strongly positive for carcinoembryonic antigen and cytokeratin 20 and failed to stain for CA125, whereas staining for HAM56 and cytokeratin 7 was absent or only focally positive in one case each. Three intestinal primary tumors involved the small bowel. Microscopic evaluation of the intestinal tumors in three cases and metastases in a fourth, in which the intestinal primary was not resected, showed the features of the uncommon clear cell variant of intestinal adenocarcinoma; the fifth was predominantly a conventional intestinal adenocarcinoma with only a focal clear cell component. Although intestinal adenocarcinomas metastatic in the ovary typically simulate endometrioid adenocarcinoma of the usual type or mucinous adenocarcinoma, they may mimic either primary clear cell adenocarcinoma or the secretory variant of endometrioid adenocarcinoma, particularly when the primary tumor is, even focally, the clear cell variant of intestinal adenocarcinoma.
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PMID:Metastatic intestinal carcinomas simulating primary ovarian clear cell carcinoma and secretory endometrioid carcinoma: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of five cases. 966 43

The presence of colonic tumor cells in the circulation may predict colorectal carcinoma recurrence and metastases. We have developed a highly sensitive nested RT-PCR assay, with primers derived from the cytokeratin 20 (CK20) and the carcinoembryonic gene CGM2, to detect occult microdisseminated enterocytes in blood of colorectal cancer patients. Among 82 healthy controls analyzed, 40.2% (33/82) have a positive expression of CK20 mRNA which is not statistically different from the 45.5% (15/33) of positive results found in colon cancer patients. This sensitive method may detect non-tissue specific constitutive low level (illegitimate) expression of CK20 mRNA in peripheral nucleated blood cells (PNBC) of a significant number of healthy control as well as in a number of normal bone marrow. The low specificity of this assay therefore hampers its value to detect blood colon cancer dissemination. In 47 patients with colorectal carcinoma, CGM2 primers detected circulating enterocytes in 25 of them (53%). In disseminated Dukes' stage C disease patients, 17 out of 29 (59%) were found positive whereas in localized adenocarcinoma (Dukes's stage A and B), CGM2 primers detected enterocytes in 44% suggesting that an hematogenous spillage of colonic cells may be a relatively early event in colon cancer. None of the patients suffering from benign colonic pathologies or from diverticulitis were found positive for this assay. The analysis of 56 healthy individuals without known colorectal cancer, of 20 non-colorectal cancer patients and of 6 normal bone marrows provide evidence that this assay is highly specific and may predict an hematogenous spread of colonic cells in patients with organ-confined disease. Nevertheless, the clinical significance of enterocyte detection and the potential applications of this molecular tool merit longer term follow-up.
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PMID:[Evaluation and interest in new molecular markers in colon cancer]. 977 30

We report a case of primary neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin (PNECS) mimicking a lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma of the skin (LELCS) with respect to both cytomorphology and the presence of a dense lymphoplasmacytic stroma. The tumor occurred in the left forearm of a 86-year-old woman, and its history was marked by aggressive behavior, with metastases to lymph nodes and to visceral sites within 1.5 years of diagnosis. The neoplastic epithelial cells had an immunophenotypic profile typical of PNECS, reacting for cytokeratin 20 and other low-molecular weight cytokeratins, neuron-specific enolase, neurofilament protein, synaptophysin, and chromogranin A. In addition, they were immunoreactive for epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, and S-100 protein, as observed in LELCS of supposed adnexal differentiation. The tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes were mostly of T-lineage, with a predominance of CD8+ cells. We believe the case is a morphologic variant of PNECS, retaining its aggressive behavior and high metastatic potential, and should not be confused with true LELCS, which has a more favorable outcome. Immunohistochemistry is paramount in establishing the diagnosis. Lymphoid infiltration, even if prominent, does not seem to be of favorable prognostic significance in such a context.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin with lymphoepithelioma-like features. 979 Jan 10

We describe a 60-year-old woman with leg pain. Although metastatic bone tumor and atypical cells mimicking signet-ring cells in the bone marrow picture were observed, systemic survey revealed no primary lesion. The patient died two months after admission from systemic progress of the disease. Autopsy revealed a small focus of adenocarcinoma within the right upper lobe of the lung and systemic metastases without any particular changes in the gastrointestinal tract. The tumor cells of the lung were diffusely positive for cytokeratin 7, whereas cytokeratin 20 immunoreactivity was weak and focal, and that supported the lung origin of the present tumor. Moreover, the tumor cells in the bone marrow showed a similar pattern in immunoreactivity. These findings suggest that cytokeratin 7 and cytokeratin 20 immunoreactivity is helpful for the premortem diagnosis of the metastatic tumor of unknown origin.
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PMID:An autopsy case of cytokeratin 7-positive minute adenocarcinoma of the lung with systemic metastases. 980 85

Adenocarcinomas metastatic to brain from lung or colon may pose differentiation difficulties. Ultrastructurally, both may have brush borders with rootlets. This study examines the ultrastructural morphology and immunohistochemical expression of villin (associated with rootlets), cytokeratin 7 (present in lung adenocarcinomas), and cytokeratin 20 (present in colon adenocarcinomas) in 19 formalin-fixed sequential surgical biopsies of lung adenocarcinomas metastatic to brain as compared to 13 colonic adenocarcinoma metastases. Of lung tumor metastases, mucinous differentiation with rootlets was most common [6/19(32%)]. All colon tumor metastases were cytokeratin 7(-), 20(+), and profusely villin(+). Well-formed rootlets were seen. All lung metastases were cytokeratin 7(+) and 20(-). 5/6(83%) lung metastases with rootlets were focally villin(+). 12/13(95%) without rootlets were villin(-). Rootlets are extremely common in lung adenocarcinoma metastatic to brain. Villin immunoreactivity closely correlates with rootlets. Its distribution is a useful adjunct to cytokeratin 7 and 20 in differentiation of lung versus colon adenocarcinomas metastatic to the brain.
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PMID:Lung adenocarcinomas metastatic to the brain with and without ultrastructural evidence of rootlets: an electron microscopic and immunohistochemical study using cytokeratins 7 and 20 and villin. 988 81

We studied the metastatic properties of human tumor cells and tumor cell dissemination in a xenograft tumor model for human colorectal carcinoma in athymic rats which shows a reproducible pattern of metastases similar to the clinical situation. Such a model is also attractive for evaluating several therapeutic approaches. The tumor cell lines HT-29 and WiDr which are derived from the same colorectal tumor and exhibit a similar tumorigenic potential after subcutaneous injection were injected into the portal venous system of 4-week-old male nude rats. After injection of WiDr cells no liver metastases were observed; however, 50% of the rats developed liver metastases 4-12 weeks after injection of HT-29. Immunostaining of the liver cryosections at different times after injection revealed a total disappearance of WiDr cells within the first 12 h. A subpopulation of HT-29 (HT29-b) with increased metastatic activity was isolated by double selection and recultivation of cells from induced liver metastases. After a 6- to 12-week period rats injected with HT-29b showed a pattern of metastases with additional lung metastases and in some cases peritoneal carcinosis. In addition to immunohistochemistry cytokeratin 20 reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction was confirmed to be a sensitive and specific tool for the detection of disseminated tumor cells in different compartments.
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PMID:A human carcinoma model in athymic rats reflecting solid and disseminated colorectal metastases. 992 49


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