Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five cases of basal cell carcinomas (BCC) of the skin are described showing morphologic and immunohistochemical features of myoepithelial differentiation. Histologically, they were characterized by a dermal proliferation of tumor cells connected with the epidermis by areas showing the features of conventional BCC, with the deeper portions of the lesion showing a population of oval to spindle cells with eccentric nuclei and homogeneous, ground-glass, or hyaline eosinophilic cytoplasm characteristic of the so-called hyaline cell of myoepithelial tumors of salivary glands. Additionally, scattered cells showing a signet ring configuration were present, and in two cases, focal areas displaying chondromyxoid elements were also seen that appeared to merge imperceptibly with the surrounding spindle cell population. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells in the spindle cell component showed strong, diffuse positivity for CAM 5.2 and muscle specific actin, and variable expression of keratin AE1/AE3, vimentin, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and S-100 protein, these findings being consistent with the immunostaining pattern of myoepithelial cells and their neoplasms. A brief review of the literature on the topic is presented, along with a discussion of the possible pathogenesis of this process.
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PMID:Myoepithelial differentiation in basal cell carcinoma. 192 20

Intratumoral heterogeneity was observed in two tumor lines (SbC11 and SbC12) derived from a single biopsy of a melanoma patient. Differences in drug sensitivity were observed in three cell lines of small cell lung carcinoma derived from the same patient, before (AE1), and after (AE2 and AE3) therapy with Adriamycin (ADM) and Cisplatinum (DDP). Moreover, heterogeneity in biological features and in drug sensitivity was observed in three continuous human glioma derived cell lines (LI, DF, and DP). The results show the importance of continuous cell lines for studying tumor heterogeneity and evaluating the effectiveness of antineoplastic agents.
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PMID:[The use of continuous cell cultures for the study of tumor heterogeneity and drug sensitivity]. 196 94

To determine the incidence and clinical significance of micrometastases in the bone marrow of breast carcinoma patients, we performed an immunoalkaline phosphatase assay using anticytokeratin (AE1, AE3, MAK-6) and antiepithelial (113F1, 260F9, 317G5) antibodies on the bone marrow aspirates of 71 stage IV disease patients with either recurrent regional or distant metastases. Although we detected tumor cells within the bone marrow of 38% of these patients with this assay, no significant correlation was seen with patient's age, menopausal status, bone scan, bone marrow core histology, response to induction chemotherapy, number of metastatic sites, dominant site of metastasis, or subsequent clinical outcome. The clinical parameters that were associated with improved survival were one dominant site of metastatic disease and regional soft tissue recurrence without distant disease.
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PMID:Detection of micrometastatic tumor cells in bone marrow of breast carcinoma patients. 202 19

We report 18 cases of primary cutaneous neuroendocrine carcinoma (CNEC, Merkel cell tumor) that occurred mainly in the sun-exposed skin of elderly patients as dermal and subcutaneous masses of generally monomorphic cells with foci of pronounced pleomorphism. All 18 cases showed immunoreactivity for neuron-specific enolase (NSE), whereas 16 of them showed immunoreactivity for another neuroendocrine marker, protein gene product 9.5 (PGP 9.5). Positivity for PGP 9.5 was more intense and more sharply localized to tumor cells than the staining for NSE. Immunoreactivity for keratins detected by AE1/AE3 and CAM 5.2 monoclonal antibodies was found in 16 and 15 cases, respectively, with prominent paranuclear globular staining. One case stained positively for S-100 protein; all were negative for leukocyte common antigen (LCA). Typical ultrastructural features of neuroendocrine differentiation were noted in all of 14 tumors examined. Morphological and immunohistochemical similarities between these neoplasms and pulmonary small-cell anaplastic carcinoma, now thought to be of bronchial basal cell origin, suggest that CNEC are also derived from epithelium. In addition, their dermal location suggests that this epithelium is likely to be adnexal rather than epidermal.
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PMID:Primary cutaneous neuroendocrine carcinoma (Merkel cell tumor). An adnexal epithelial neoplasm. 213 34

Hepatocellular carcinoma with osteoclast-like giant cells (hepatic giant cell carcinoma [HGCC]) is a rare entity, with only three cases reported. The tumor is histologically similar to giant cell tumor (GCT) of bone, and the origin of the multinucleated giant cells and mononuclear stromal cells has not been determined. The purpose of this report is to present a case of this rare tumor and compare its ultrastructural and immunohistochemical features with those of a conventional GCT of bone. Histologically, the HGCC consists of sheets of osteoclast-like giant cells with a background of mononuclear cells. The giant cells lack the pleomorphism seen in hepatocellular carcinomas with anaplastic giant cells. At the light microscopic level, most of this tumor was nearly identical to a GCT of bone, but several microscopic fields (less than 5% of the tumor) had the histologic appearance of a "usual" hepatocellular carcinoma. The hepatic tumor was negative for HAM 56, epithelial cytokeratins, muramidase, and alpha-1-antitrypsin, with only focal positivity for chymotrypsin in mononuclear and giant cells. The GCT was strongly positive for alpha-1-antitrypsin and chymotrypsin in both the mononuclear and giant cells and showed focal, weak staining for AE1 and AE3 in the mononuclear stromal cells. Ultrastructurally, both mononuclear and giant cells of the HGCC showed features typical of hepatocellular carcinoma. Although the patient presented in this report died, the pattern of growth was different from most hepatocellular carcinomas. The overall histologic features of this tumor are distinctive and appear to justify separating this variant from other types of hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:Hepatic giant cell carcinoma. An ultrastructural and immunohistochemical study. 215 1

Thirteen cases of primary thymic carcinomas are described. The patients' ages ranged from 19 to 64 years, with a median of 40 years. Nine of them were male. Chest pain with or without cough was the main presenting symptom. No patient had myasthenia gravis. Five histological types were identified; two were undifferentiated (lymphoepithelioma-like) carcinoma, one was a clear-cell carcinoma, two were mixed squamous and small-cell carcinoma, and six were squamous cell carcinoma. All the tumors were variably positive for anti-keratin antibody AE1 and AE3, but negative for AE2. Anti-neuron specific enolase antibody was useful in identifying and confirming the small-cell carcinoma component of the mixed carcinomas. Anti-epithelial membrane antigen antibody aided in revealing the glandular structures in mixed adenosquamous and small-cell carcinomas. Thymic carcinomas were histopathologically differentiated from thymomas by their malignant cytological appearance, increased mitotic activity, and central tumor necrosis. All six patients with pure squamous-cell carcinoma were still alive, with a median survival time of 27 months. All but one of the other patients of different histological types died, the exception being a recent case of mixed adenosquamous and small-cell carcinoma; their median survival was 19.5 months, or 18 months when the latter surviving case is included. The prognosis of patients with pure squamous-cell carcinoma was better.
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PMID:Thymic carcinomas: histopathological varieties and immunohistochemical study. 229 78

Immunohistochemical (IHC) techniques should allow for a greater detection of bone marrow micrometastasis in patients with breast carcinoma. We studied a series of bone marrow (BM) biopsies negative by conventional histologic techniques from 93 patients with breast carcinoma. Prior to this study, twelve BM biopsies, positive by conventional histology, were stained with a panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAb), directed either against cytokeratin (KL1, AE1-AE3, CAM5-2) or epithelial membrane antigen (EMA, HMFG2). KL1 appeared to be the most sensitive of the markers used in the detection of metastases and is available commercially. It therefore was the only MoAb used with the series of 93 BM biopsies negative by conventional examination. Within this series, among 45 patients clinically suspected of having bone marrow metastasis but with BM biopsies negative by conventional staining, one case showing myelofibrosis stained positive with KL1 demonstrating isolated tumor cells. For the 48 patients without suspicion of bone marrow metastasis at initial diagnosis for breast carcinoma, KL1 revealed no marrow metastasis. Single bone marrow biopsy techniques whether stained by conventional or IHC methods do not appear to be useful tests to detect occult bone marrow metastasis, especially at initial diagnosis of clinically Mo breast carcinoma patients.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical staining of bone marrow biopsies for detection of occult metastasis in breast cancer. 232 27

Three monoclonal anti-keratin antibodies, AE1, AE3, and AE4, were used to compare the expression of keratins in normal, preneoplastic, and malignant mouse mammary epithelial cells growing in primary culture. In indirect immunofluorescence, AE1 did not stain normal cells but did stain a minority of preneoplastic and carcinoma cells. AE3 reacted with a subpopulation of epithelial cells in both the normal and abnormal cultures, except for certain cultures from one type of tumor wherein all of the epithelial cells were reactive. AE4 decorated an elaborate keratin filament network in all cultured mammary epithelial cells, regardless of neoplastic state. In double-label immunofluorescence, a guinea pig anti-keratin antiserum, which reacts preferentially with myoepithelial cells, exhibited coincident staining with AE1 in the tumor cultures and AE3 in the normal and most tumor cultures, indicating that the cells recognized by the antibodies in these populations were myoepithelial. Immunoblot experiments with cytoskeletal polypeptides extracted from the normal and tumor cells demonstrated that the set of keratins recognized by each monoclonal antibody was essentially the same in all of the cells except for a Mr 40,000 component that was present in normal cells but either absent or diminished in the cancer cells. Thus, while normal cells had Mr 40,000 and 50,000 keratins recognized by AE1, the epitope detected by this antibody was apparently concealed or "masked" in situ. AE3 reacted in immunoblots with a major keratin group (Mr 54,000-55,000) and a minor keratin (Mr 57,000), while AE4 reacted only with the Mr 54,000-55,000 keratin species. Because immunofluorescence with AE4 showed that the Mr 54,000-55,000 keratin group was present in all mammary epithelial cells, the AE3-reactive epitope must be masked in the majority of normal and tumor cells. The data therefore showed that epitopes on three major keratins, the Mr 40,000, 50,000, and 54,000-55,000 group, were "masked" in normal cells, whereas in tumor cells "masking" involved primarily the Mr 54,000-55,000 keratin. Attempts to "unmask" the epitopes recognized by AE1 in normal cells or to increase the number of cells reactive with AE3 in the normal and tumor cultures failed. Thus, certain cultured preneoplastic and neoplastic mammary cells with a myoepithelial phenotype have an altered organization of keratins that is manifested by a keratin antigenic determinant which is visible by immunocytochemistry in the abnormal cells but not in normal mouse mammary cells. This is the first demonstration that the immunoreactivity of keratins can be modified during neoplastic progression of epithelial cells.
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PMID:A keratin epitope that is exposed in a subpopulation of preneoplastic and neoplastic mouse mammary epithelial cells but not in normal cells. 241 2

Epithelial membrane antigen and keratin proteins represent markers of epithelial differentiation that may be detected in routine formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. Eighty-seven neoplasms, including 48 adenocarcinomas of various types, squamous and transitional cell carcinomas, small-cell anaplastic carcinomas, carcinoid tumors, mesotheliomas, hepatomas, melanomas (metastatic), adrenal cortical carcinomas, germ cell tumors, and extramammary Paget's disease, were assessed to determine the relative effectiveness of these antigens as tumor markers. Immunoperoxidase studies were performed using monoclonal antibodies to epithelial membrane antigen and monoclonal (combined AE1 and AE3) and polyclonal (bovine muzzle keratins) antibodies to keratin proteins. In more than half the cases (50/87%), both markers yielded comparable results. However, in 29 cases (33%), keratin proteins were clearly superior to epithelial membrane antigen as a tumor cell marker. Particular discrepancies were apparent for some gastrointestinal adenocarcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, hepatomas (hepatocellular type), spindle cell components of mesotheliomas, and carcinoid tumors. Epithelial membrane antigen represented a better marker in eight cases (9%), mainly for small-cell anaplastic carcinomas and some renal cell and pulmonary adenocarcinomas. Adrenal cortical carcinomas, melanomas, and seminomas were nonimmunoreactive for both antigens. Epithelial membrane antigen and keratin proteins represent useful complementary markers in diagnostic surgical pathology.
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PMID:Are keratin proteins a better tumor marker than epithelial membrane antigen? A comparative immunohistochemical study of various paraffin-embedded neoplasms using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. 242 37

The histogenetic origin of the spindle-cell component of spindle-cell carcinoma of the head and neck mucosa remains controversial. The spindle cells have been considered a variant growth pattern of squamous-cell carcinoma, a non-neoplastic mesenchymal reaction, and a malignant admixture of epithelial and mesenchymal neoplasm. To evaluate the spindle-cell component, we studied 25 tumors (18 biphasic and seven monophasic) by utilizing the following: an avidin-biotin complex immunoperoxidase technique with a variety of antikeratin antibodies (AE1, AE3, CAM 5.2, 35BH11, and polyclonal Dako) and a monoclonal antivimentin antibody, and an avidin-biotin alkaline phosphatase double-labeling technique to detect coexpression of keratin and vimentin. The immunohistologic staining pattern was compared with electron-microscopic studies. Eight of 18 biphasic neoplasms contained immunoreactive keratin in the spindle-cell component that was distributed focally in a minority of cells in 3 tumors and diffusely throughout five of the neoplasms. Four of seven ulcerated monophasic spindle-cell tumors devoid of histologic squamous-cell carcinoma also were keratin positive, confirming epithelial differentiation. The majority of the spindle cells in all the tumors contained vimentin intermediate filaments. In three immunoperoxidase keratin positive biphasic tumors examined with alkaline phosphatase double labeling, occasional spindle cells were found that coexpressed keratin and vimentin and were interspersed with cells expressing either intermediate filament. Electron microscopy was performed on the spindle-cell component of 13 tumors, nine biphasic and four monophasic. Of the biphasic tumors, four were immunoperoxidase keratin positive; three of these showed epithelial differentiation by electron microscopy. Five biphasic tumors were keratin negative, and three tumors had epithelial differentiation by electron microscopy. Four monophasic spindle-cell tumors were immunoperoxidase keratin positive, and one of these had epithelial features by electron microscopy. Two monophasic tumors were keratin negative and without ultrastructural evidence of epithelial features. By using a combination of immunohistochemical and electron-microscopic observations, we identified evidence for epithelial differentiation in the spindled cells in 11 of 18 biphasic tumors and four of seven monophasic spindle-cell tumors.
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PMID:Spindle-cell carcinoma of the upper aerodigestive tract mucosa. An immunohistologic and ultrastructural study of 18 biphasic tumors and comparison with seven monophasic spindle-cell tumors. 243 Apr 74


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