Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tracheobronchial submucous glands can be considered the pulmonary equivalent of minor salivary glands and therefore they can develop most of the tumours originated in these. Nevertheless, in spite of the wide distribution of this kind of glands along the tracheobronchial tree, pulmonary salivary gland-like neoplasms are not very frequent. Among them, the most frequent are mucoepidermoid and adenoid cystic carcinomas. On the contrary, pulmonary neoplasms showing a mixture of epithelial and myoepithelial elements are extraordinary infrequent, with only 11 cases collected from literature.We present the case of a 76 year-old woman with no interesting pathological history, to whom a pulmonary nodule is detected during a study of unknown origin neutropenia. An upper right lobectomy is performed.After macro and microscopic study, the diagnosis of pulmonary epithelial-myoepithelial tumour is made. It is a low malignant potential tumour with capacity to locally recur and less frequently to metastasize. Our case has the peculiarity of not being connected neither to visceral pleura nor to bronchial tree; we have not found this characteristic in any literature reviewed case.These tumours have been named in a lot of different ways, including adenomyoepithelioma, epithelial-myoepithelial tumour, epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma or epithelial-myoepithelial tumour of uncertain malignant potential.The p27/kip-1 protein plays a fundamental role in the development of these neoplasms. As we have verified in our case, its aberrant cytoplasmic location, besides its proved oncogenic function, would favour the proliferation of stem cells, which would explain both dual phenotype with presence of myoepithelial cells without connection with the bronchial tree, and TTF-1 immunostaining in epithelial cells.
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PMID:Epithelial-myoepithelial tumour of the lung: a case report referring to its molecular histogenesis. 2179 17

The patient was a 68-year-old man who underwent pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy for cancer of the pancreatic head in March 2012. Pre-operative chest computed tomography (CT) revealed a scar-like shade approximately 1.5 cm in length in the right middle lobe of the lung, but an active metastasis was not suspected. Adjuvant S-1 was initiated in June the same year at 100 mg/day and reduced to 50 mg/day in October because of neutropenia. The internal structure of the right middle lobe was observed to be uneven on a CT scan obtained in July 2013, and the shading increased to approximately 3 cm in length along with spicula. Brushing and transbronchial lung biopsy(TBLB)were performed. No other distant organ metastases were detected on a whole body search. Diagnosis was between a solitary lung metastasis of pancreatic cancer or cT2N0M0, StageIB primary lung cancer. The right middle lobe of the lung was resected via thoracoscopy along with lymph node dissection in September 2013. Histological examination revealed that the lesion was a well differentiated adenocarcinoma, with negative immunostaining for thyroid transcription factor-1(TTF-1) and Napsin A, and positive staining for cytokeratin (CK)7 and CK20, consistent with a solitary lung metastasis of pancreatic cancer. This report documents a rare case of pancreatic cancer with a solitary, resectable lung metastasis without involvement of other organs.
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PMID:[A case of resectable lung metastasis one year six months after surgery for pancreatic cancer]. 2573 56