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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Carcinosarcomas of the prostate gland are exceedingly rare, and previous reports exist on only seven of these neoplasms. The authors studied two such tumors, which occurred in 63- and 69-year-old patients. One of them had osseous metastases develop, which were treated unsuccessfully by irradiation and diethylstilbestrol therapy. The other patient is free of disease 15 months after radical prostatectomy. Both tumors contained an intimate mixture of carcinoma and sarcoma; patient 1 displayed foci of chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, and leiomyosarcoma, whereas patient 2 exhibited areas of chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and angiosarcoma. The phenotypic nature of these tissues was confirmed by immunohistochemical studies, showing reactivity for vimentin, S-100 protein, desmin, actin, myoglobin, or Ulex europaeus I agglutinin. Conversely, the sarcomatous components lacked prostate-specific antigen, epithelial membrane antigen, and cytokeratin, whereas carcinomatous elements expressed these three markers. The authors' data support the existence of true carcinosarcomas of the prostate, that is, malignant neoplasms with conjoint epithelial and mesenchymal differentiation. The question of whether prostatic carcinosarcoma is an entity that is totally distinct from sarcomatoid or metaplastic carcinoma remains problematic.
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PMID:Prostatic carcinosarcomas. Clinical, histologic, and immunohistochemical data on two cases, with a review of the literature. 247 43

Reported is the case history of a 58-year-old woman with a lump in the left breast. The tumor was composed of two nodules, sharing a common portion. Grossly, one was an irregular hard tumor that was grayish in color, and the other was a well circumscribed cystic tumor that showed necrosis and a hemorrhage that had filled it with a reddish soft mass. Light microscopically, combined features of a scirrhous carcinoma and of an osteosarcoma were observed in each nodule, but the common portion was consistent with a metaplastic carcinoma, with cancer cells and sarcoma-like cells closely mingled. An ultrastructural study showed that the sarcoma-like cells were composed of polymorphic cells that resembled osteoblasts, myofibroblasts, osteoclasts, histiocytes, and undifferentiated tumor cells. Immunohistochemically, vimentin and alpha 1-antitrypsin in the sarcoma-like cells were positive, suggesting these cells were of a mesenchymal rather than of an epithelial origin.
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PMID:[Breast carcinoma with features of osteosarcoma--a light and electron microscopic and immunohistochemical study]. 255 11

Pleomorphic spindle cells, osteoclastlike giant cells and plaques of osteoidlike material were the cytologic features observed in fine needle aspirates of the breast tumors from two patients. This cytologic pattern suggested a diagnosis of osteogenic sarcoma, a rare neoplasm in the breast. Immunoperoxidase staining performed on the original smears showed reactivity for vimentin in both cases. One tumor was also positive for epithelial membrane antigen (EMA); reactivity for this marker revealed the metaplastic nature of the sarcomatous cells in this tumor, suggesting a diagnosis of metaplastic carcinoma. Histologically, both tumors showed a sarcomatous pattern, with osteoid and chondroid formation, with no evidence of epithelial differentiation. Polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against epithelial and mesenchymal markers used in tissue sections confirmed the immunophenotypes identified cytologically. Based on the immunochemical findings, the final diagnoses were osteogenic sarcoma of the breast in one case and osteogenic metaplastic carcinoma of the breast in the second case. Both patients died of metastatic disease within one year. These cases (1) show the reliability and accuracy of the immunoperoxidase method in making a differential diagnosis of ambiguous cytologic patterns in fine needle aspirates, (2) support the occurrence of a true osteogenic sarcoma of the breast (comparable to its skeletal counterpart) and (3) demonstrate that metaplastic carcinomas may closely simulate sarcomas of the breast, morphologically as well as biologically. Immunochemical staining techniques play an important role in the differential diagnosis of these neoplasms.
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PMID:Primary osteogenic sarcoma and osteogenic metaplastic carcinoma of the breast. Immunocytochemical identification in fine needle aspirates. 278 63

A case of primary osteosarcoma of the breast in an 83 year-old woman was studied by using a large immunohistochemical panel of antibodies. Tumor cells were stained intensely for vimentin, and focally for alpha-1-antitrypsin. No immunoreactivity was detected for cytokeratin. The absence of an epithelial component excludes a metaplastic carcinoma. The multinucleated giant cells stained strongly for KP-1 antibody, indicating a histiocytic nature. The question is raised whether osteosarcoma of the breast is a malignant tumor de novo, or develops by transformation of a fibroadenoma.
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PMID:Primary osteosarcoma of the breast. 747 66

Metaplastic carcinoma (carcinosarcoma, sarcomatoid carcinoma, malignant mixed tumor) is a biphasic tumor comprising malignant epithelial and heterologous mesenchymal elements. Primary cutaneous cases are rare, with only seven cases documented in the English literature to date. We present four further cases, including three that developed in association with squamous cell carcinoma and one in an eccrine porocarcinoma. Heterologous malignant mesenchymal elements included malignant osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, leiomyosarcoma, and rhabdomyosarcomas. In contrast to metaplastic carcinomas arising in visceral sites, those primarily arising in the skin do not appear to behave in a very aggressive manner (Recurrence rate 22%, metastasis rate 22%, overall mortality 11%). However, the numbers involved are small and the follow-up period is short. In view of recent developments and progress in our understanding of the possible histogenesis of such tumors, we suggest that metaplastic carcinoma rather than carcinosarcoma is the most appropriate term with which to describe these very rare cutaneous neoplasms.
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PMID:Primary metaplastic carcinoma (carcinosarcoma) of the skin. A clinicopathologic study of four cases and review of the literature. 926 71

Spindle cell (sarcomatoid) carcinoma of the breast is a rare variant of breast cancer that has been classified under the broad rubric of metaplastic carcinoma. Because the term "metaplastic carcinoma" comprises a heterogeneous group of tumors, it has been difficult to reliably predict biologic potential or to determine optimal therapy. To better characterize the spindle cell subset of metaplastic breast carcinomas, we reviewed 29 cases. All patients were adult females ranging from 40 to 96 years of age (median, 68 years). Tumor size ranged from 1.5 to 15 cm (median, 4 cm). Treatment was by excision and/or mastectomy with axillary node evaluation in most cases, often combined with postoperative radiation and/or chemotherapy. All cases were clinically of breast origin, showed >or=80% spindled/sarcomatoid morphology, and demonstrated keratin positivity and/or close association with ductal carcinoma in situ. Immunohistochemical studies showed evidence suggesting myoepithelial differentiation as exhibited by immunoreactivity for smooth muscle actin, cytokeratin 14, and p63 in a subset of cases (39%). Twenty-seven cases exhibited pure spindled or sarcomatoid morphology of variable appearance and nuclear grade, whereas 2 contained high-grade invasive ductal carcinoma comprising <or=20% of the tumor mass. Two cases exhibited heterologous elements (1 rhabdomyosarcoma and 1 with both chondrosarcoma and osteosarcoma) and 4 were associated with ductal carcinoma in situ. Follow-up data were available on 24 of 29 patients (range, 1-120 months; median, 20 months). Of 20 cases in which axillary nodes were biopsied, definitive nodal metastases were identified in only 1 (5%), and this was in a case with a significant component of invasive ductal carcinoma. Three patients developed local recurrences. Extranodal metastases occurred in 11 of 24 patients (46%), most commonly to the lungs. Ten of 24 patients (42%) died of disease at a median interval of 11.5 months (range, 1-46 months) and 3 patients were alive with metastatic disease. Eight patients were alive with no evidence of recurrent or metastatic disease (median, 29.5 months). Based on this series, spindle cell/sarcomatoid carcinoma of the breast is a highly aggressive neoplasm with a high rate of extranodal metastases. Purely spindled/sarcomatoid tumors have a significantly lower rate of nodal metastases than conventional ductal and lobular breast carcinomas.
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PMID:Spindle cell (sarcomatoid) carcinoma of the breast: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 29 cases. 1725 81

Metaplastic breast carcinoma (MBC) is a rare neoplasm containing a mixture of epithelial and mesenchymal elements. The epithelial component is usually ductal carcinoma but may include other variants of breast carcinomas including squamous carcinoma and osteogenic sarcoma. There is a relative paucity of data regarding such tumours. Metaplastic carcinoma carries a prognosis not dissimilar to that of comparable ductal carcinoma. This is the case of a 57 year old patient with MBC presenting with a breast abscess. A thorough literature search has not revealed any previous reports of MBC presenting as a breast abscess.
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PMID:Case report: Metaplastic carcinoma presenting as a breast abscess. 1694 57

We describe here a female patient who presented with a breast mass and giant abdominal mass. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the breast mass and histological examination after modified radical mastectomy confirmed metaplastic carcinoma of the breast. The epithelial components were formed by infiltrating ductal carcinoma with poor differentiation, and the sarcomatous components were formed by fibrosarcoma and osteosarcoma. Histological examination of the abdominal mass confirmed ovarian teratoma. The patient underwent modified radical mastectomy of the right breast and laparoscopic excision of the abdominal mass in the lower right quadrant. Having underwent six courses of chemotherapy, the patient is now in her tenth month after surgery and under follow-up, and she has no relapsed disease. These two diseases have never seen in one patient before. The case we report here provides some new data for research and clinical experience and it may also provide a new insight into the relationship between metaplastic breast carcinoma and ovarian teratoma.
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PMID:Metaplastic carcinoma of the right breast and simultaneous giant ovarian teratoma: a case report. 2285 62

Metaplastic carcinoma of the breast refers to a heterogenous group of mammary carcinomas that contain a mixture of various cell types, including squamous cells, spindle cells and/or a mesenchymal component, such as bone or cartilage. To the best of our knowledge, the clinical course of a tumour that has undergone a transformation from one type of metaplastic carcinoma to another subtype has not previously been reported. The present study reports the five-year clinical and pathological course of a metaplastic breast carcinoma in a 55-year-old female, who was diagnosed with a sclerosing fibroadenomatous nodule with osseous metaplasia and focal atypia. A recurrent tumour was documented four years later, showing a predominant component of osteosarcoma with adenosquamous carcinoma. Upon pathological review of the initial mass, the diagnosis was changed to low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma. The patient was treated with breast conserving therapy. However, one year later, a recurrent metaplastic carcinoma with spindle cell morphology was documented and surgically removed by mastectomy. Subsequently, pulmonary invasion of the chest wall occurred and the patient eventually succumbed due to the invasive nature of the disease.
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PMID:Metaplastic carcinoma of the breast with transformation from adenosquamous carcinoma to osteosarcomatoid and spindle cell morphology. 2413

Pure sarcomas of the breast are uncommon, accounting for less than 1% of primary breast malignant tumors. Mammary osteogenic sarcomas are very rare and less than 100 cases have been reported in literature. They mainly affect older and middle aged women and are highly aggressive. We report an additional case in a 56-year-old woman. Histological and immunohistological characteristics were similar to those described in other localizations. Differential diagnosis involves phyllodes sarcoma, breast metaplastic carcinoma with chondroid and osteoid differentiation, osteosarcoma of the ribs, and metastatic osteosarcoma. The prognosis is poor.
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PMID:Primary chondroblastic osteosarcoma of the breast. 2603 58


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