Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rhabdomyosarcomas (RMSs) are classified into embryonal (ERMS), alveolar (ARMS), and pleomorphic (PRMS) subtypes. ERMS, including botryoid variants, typically occurs in young children, ARMS typically occurs in older children and young adults, and PRMS occurs in older adults. Although ARMSs show thin fibrous bands separating nests of cells, abundant extracellular matrix production is rare in RMS. In the course of reviewing hyalinizing sarcomas we discovered a distinctive RMS in adults that closely mimicked osteosarcoma or chondrosarcoma because of the extensive matrix production. Four RMSs with hyalinized matrix were retrieved from our files. These cases were evaluated with respect to patient age and sex, tumor site and size, growth pattern, nuclear grade, cellularity, mitotic figures/20 high power fields, vascular invasion, necrosis, the presence of rhabdomyoblasts, multinucleated cells, and alveolar growth pattern. Immunohistochemistry for desmin, myogenin, MyoD1, actin, cytokeratin, S-100 protein, collagen II, and CD99 was performed. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for the ARMS-associated PAX3/FKHR and PAX7/PKHF was also performed on three cases. The cases involved the forearm, hand, orbit, and nasopharynx of a 40-year-old woman, a 50-year-old man, an 18-year-old man, and a 21-year-old man, respectively. The tumors ranged from 3.7 to 8 cm and consisted of lobules and infiltrating cords of small round malignant cells embedded in a densely hyalinized matrix having both a chondroid and osteoid-like appearance. No definite lacunae or matrix calcification was present. An alveolar pattern was only present focally, and tumor giant cells were not present. One case had a single focus of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation with strap cells. Mitotic activity was >20 mitotic figures/20 high power fields in three of four cases. Immunohistochemically, one case strongly expressed desmin, whereas three cases expressed it focally, with a dot-like pattern. Myogenin was only focally positive, but MyoD1 was present in nearly every cell of each case. Two cases expressed actin and one expressed CD99. No case expressed cytokeratin, S-100 protein, or collagen II. Only one case contained adequate RNA for reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and this case was negative for the ARMS-associated gene fusions. Follow-up showed one patient to be dead of metastatic disease at 60 months despite intensive therapy, another patient to be disease free at 26 months, and the third patient to be disease free at 5 months. The fourth case is recent. These cases are a distinctive-appearing rhabdomyosarcoma easily mistaken for variants of chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, or even sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma because of their hyalinizing appearance compounded by their typically focal and dot-like desmin expression. These four cases are essentially identical to the three unusual RMSs recently reported by Mentzel and Katenkamp as "sclerosing, pseudovascular rhabdomyosarcoma in adults." Although the focal alveolar architecture and the primitive cytologic appearance of these hyalinizing RMS suggest a relationship with ARMS, the presence of abundant strap cells in one case, the predominant expression of MyoD1 rather than myogenin, and the absence of ARMS-associated fusions genes point more strongly toward a variant of ERMS. However, the late adult age in two cases is unusual for both EMRS and ARMS, suggesting that sclerosing RMS may prove to be a distinct subtype of RMS. Study of additional cases will be necessary to more fully elucidate its place among RMS and its prognostic significance.
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PMID:Sclerosing rhabdomyosarcoma in adults: report of four cases of a hyalinizing, matrix-rich variant of rhabdomyosarcoma that may be confused with osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, or angiosarcoma. 1221 74

In this report, we described a case of multiple intraperitoneal tumors. Histologically, the tumors were composed of small round cells with malignant phenotype, necrotic areas, and islands of osteoid matrix in the stroma. In immunohistochemical and molecular analyses, the tumors expressed CD99 and EWS-Fli1 fusion gene. Production of osteoid by small round tumor cells was consistent with the histologic criteria of small-cell osteosarcoma, whereas expression of EWS-Fli1 was a characteristic genetic feature of Ewing's sarcoma family of tumor. Such tumors have been limited to a case in which histologically proven small-cell osteosarcoma of the scapula showed a chromosomal translocation, t(11;22)(q24;q12).
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PMID:Abdominal small round cell tumor with osteoid and EWS/FLI1. 1518 47

CD99 was recently reported to be under control of the osteoblast-specific transcription factor Cbfa1 (RUNX2) in osteoblasts, suggesting a role in the phato-physiology of these cells. No extensive information is available on the role(s) of this molecule in malignant phenotype, and osteosarcoma, in particular, has never been studied. We report that in 11 different cell lines and 17 clinical samples CD99 expression is either undetectable or very low. Being expressed in the normal counterpart, we tested the hypothesis that CD99 down-regulation may have a role in osteosarcoma development and progression. CD99-forced expression in two osteosarcoma cell lines significantly reduced resistance to anoikis, inhibited growth in anchorage independence as well as cell migration, and led to abrogation of tumorigenic and metastatic ability. Therefore, the molecule acts as a potent suppressor of malignancy in osteosarcoma. CD99 gene transfection induces caveolin-1 up-regulation and the two molecules were found to colocalize on the cell surface. Treatment with antisense oligonucleotides to caveolin-1 abrogates the effects of CD99 on migration. The findings point to an antioncogenic role for CD99 in osteosarcoma, likely through the regulation of caveolin-1 and inhibition of c-Src kinase activity.
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PMID:CD99 acts as an oncosuppressor in osteosarcoma. 1642 Dec 47

CD99 gene encodes two distinct proteins, produced by alternative splicing of CD99 gene transcript. Full-length CD99 isoform (CD99wt) is formed by an extracellular domain, followed by a transmembrane domain and a 36 amino-acid intracytoplasmic domain, which is partially deleted in the truncated, short form (CD99sh). A differential expression of these two CD99 molecules can lead to distinct functional outcomes in lymphocytes. To investigate the functional effects of CD99 molecules on malignancy, forced overexpression of the two CD99 isoforms was induced in osteosarcoma and prostate cancer cells. The two isoforms exhibited opposite functions: the major form dramatically inhibits anchorage-independent growth, anoikis resistance, migration and metastasis, whereas the CD99sh remarkably favours the phenomena. A mechanistic analysis of CD99-transfected osteosarcoma cells points to involvement of c-Src family kinase activity in regulating CD99 functions in malignancy. Ser168 residue of CD99 plays a pivotal role in the reversion of the malignant phenotype. Our findings highlight the involvement of CD99 in crucial processes of cancer malignancy, serving as a curtain raiser for this, so far neglected molecule. In addition, a dualistic role for the two CD99 isoforms was shown in agreement with what was observed for other cell adhesion molecules.
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PMID:CD99 isoforms dictate opposite functions in tumour malignancy and metastases by activating or repressing c-Src kinase activity. 1747 Dec 35

Metastasis is the most frequent cause of death among patients with osteosarcoma. We have previously demonstrated in independent experiments that the forced expression of L/B/K ALP and CD99 in U-2 OS osteosarcoma cell lines markedly reduces the metastatic ability of these cancer cells. This behavior makes these cell lines a useful model to assess the intersection of multiple and independent gene expression signatures concerning the biological problem of dissemination. With the aim to characterize a common transcriptional profile reflecting the essential features of metastatic behavior, we employed cDNA microarrays to compare the gene expression profiles of L/B/K ALP- and CD99-transfected osteosarcoma clones showing low metastatic ability with those of osteosarcoma cell lines showing contrasting behavior. Changes in gene expression were validated by real-time PCR and immunohistochemistry in independent samples. In our study we identified several differentially expressed genes (GADD45alpha, VCP, DHX9, survivin, alpha-catulin, ARPC1B) related to growth arrest and apoptosis. Most of these genes are functionally related with the nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB cell survival pathway that appeared to be inhibited in the less malignant osteosarcoma cells. Hence, we propose the inhibition of the NF-kappaB pathway as a rational strategy for effective management of human osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Apoptotic genes as potential markers of metastatic phenotype in human osteosarcoma cell lines. 1809 39

Extraskeletal osteosarcoma is a rare malignant mesenchymal neoplasm that accounts for <4% of all osteosarcomas and approximately 1.2% of all soft tissue sarcomas. Among the extraskeletal osteosarcomas, the small cell type is extremely rare. This article describes a 31-year-old man who had small cell extraskeletal osteosarcoma arising from the semimembranosus muscle. An incisional biopsy was performed and the histopathological findings showed many small cells and osteoid formation. The results were reported as a malignant small round cell tumor, consistent with an extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma or primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Immunohistochemically, the tumor showed reactivity with antibodies against CD99 and neuron-specific enolase, but not with antibodies against S100 protein, CD138, alpha smooth muscle actin, chromogranin, Ki-67, leukocyte common antigen, epithelial membrane antigen, CD30, or desmin. The patient refused neoadjuvant chemotherapy. One week after an open biopsy, a wide marginal resection was performed. The final diagnosis was small cell extraskeletal osteosarcoma. Adjuvant chemotherapy was performed using doxorubicin, ifosfamide, and cisplatin together with a total of 60 Gy of radiation therapy. At 2-year follow-up, the functional Enneking score of the operated lower extremity was 28 points. We performed chest computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography-computed tomography. There were no regional recurrence and distant metastasis. Presently the patient is disease free.
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PMID:Small cell extraskeletal osteosarcoma. 1930 43

Ewing sarcoma (ES) is the second most frequent primary malignant bone cancer, following osteosarcoma. ES is a small round-cell tumor typically arising in the bones, rarely in soft tissues, of children and adolescents. We describe four children aged 3, 3.5, 9, and 9.5 years, who presented with two femur masses simultaneously (patient 1), a huge mediastinal mass (patient 2), an abdomino-mediastinal mass with dysphagia (patient 3), and a huge abdomino-pelvic mass (patient 4). Our patients were of younger age and had abnormal presentations that made initial diagnosis difficult, but also are representative of the different problems encountered in pediatric practice. Biopsy initially revealed round cell tumor and by immunohistochemistry, CD99 was positive, which confirmed the diagnosis of ES. Our patients were difficult to diagnosis.The patients were misdiagnosed initially, so there was a delay in diagnosis. Definitive diagnosis required use of various radiological imaging methods and immunohistochemistry.
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PMID:The many faces of Ewing sarcoma: difficult to diagnose pediatric cases. 2013 55

Malignant mesenchymoma of the thyroid is extremely rare. We report such a tumor involving the bilateral lobes of the thyroid which showed simultaneous chondrosarcomatous, osteosarcomatous, fibrosarcomatous and rhabdomyosarcomatous differentiation. The patient was a 52-year-old woman admitted with a history of facial swelling, neck thickness and swallowing discomfort of one month's duration. Sonographic examination indicated a thyroid mass involving the bilateral lobes. Macroscopically, the tumors of both lobes were well demarcated, solid, greyish-white, and multinodular on the cut surface. Some nodules were translucent in appearance and hard in texture. Microscopically, the tumor was composed of small primitive mesenchymal cells with osteoid formation resembling the small cell variant of osteosarcoma interspersed with multiple cartilaginous nodules that indicated chondrosarcomatous differentiation. Some tumor cells showed prominent rhabdomyoblastic differentiation with eosinophilic cytoplasm and eccentric nuclei. Fibrosarcomatous areas were also observed. Immunohistochemically, the small primitive mesenchymal cells were positive for vimentin and CD99 and negative for CD56, Syn, CgA, CK, TG, TTF-1, calcitonin, and S-100. The tumor cells in the rhabdomyosarcomatous area were MyoD1 and muscle-specific actin positive. Molecular analysis for BRAFand RAS gene alterations showed no point mutation. The tumor recurred four months after surgery and tumor thrombi were suspected in the bilateral internal carotid arteries on ultrasonography. Primary malignant mesenchymoma of the thyroid is a high-grade malignant tumor with a poor prognosis. Its differerential diagnosis includes anaplastic carcinoma and other rare sarcomas with chondroid, osteoid, and other mesenchymal metaplasia.
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PMID:Malignant mesenchymoma of the thyroid: case report and literature review. 2057 98

Osteosarcoma is the most common primary malignant osseous neoplasm, constituting approximately 35% of skeletal malignancies. The different subtypes of osteosarcoma are differentiated based on clinical, histologic, and radiographic data, as well as the variable amount of osteoid produced by malignant cells. The epithelioid osteosarcoma subtype accounts for only 5.7% of all osteosarcomas and portends an extremely poor prognosis. The 5-year survival rate for patients with epithelioid osteosarcoma treated with surgery (with or without chemotherapy) is 13.5%. This is in direct contrast to the >70% ten-year survival rate of conventional osteosarcoma treated with surgery and chemotherapy. This article presents a fatal case of epithelioid osteosarcoma in an 11-year-old girl with right knee pain of 6 months' duration. Biopsy demonstrated morphologic findings consistent with high-grade osteosarcoma with epithelioid features. The epithelioid component was positive for vimentin and CD99; however, fluorescent in situ hybridization for the (11;22) translocation was negative. In this case, the epithelioid cells failed to respond to conventional or subsequent experimental chemotherapy for osteosarcoma and eventual metastasized to the lymph nodes and lungs despite multiple ablative surgeries. This case report supports the concept of carcinosarcoma with malignant cells lines arising from 2 different cellular lineages or a common cellular precursor. The epithelial component was more aggressive than the cells of mesenchymal origin, highlighting the need for continued research and a more favorable outcome for this rare subset of osteosarcoma.
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PMID:Progression of aggressive metastatic carcinosarcoma after treatment of epithelioid osteosarcoma. 2080 64

Osteosarcoma of the jaw is a rare disease; we report two cases, one in which the primary osteosarcoma had occurred in the sacrum and ileum, the second at the mandible. Dissemination of osteosarcoma to other organs, especially early dissemination to the lung, is common, but metastasis to the jaw has only rarely been reported. About 10% of osteosarcomas occur in the head and neck, most in the mandible or maxilla. Clinically, both patients presented swelling, and pain at the jaw in the premolar-molar region. At radiography, extensive bone erosion and soft-tissue swelling were apparent. A biopsy was taken and a diagnosis of osteosarcoma rendered in both cases. Histological examination revealed a proliferation of atypical osteoblast-like cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and formation of scattered neoplastic osteoid tissue. Immunohistochemistry for a panel of antibodies showed strong positivity for CD99, weak positivity for S-100, but was negative for desmin, vimentin, and cytokeratins. The diagnosis for both cases was of osteogenic osteosarcoma, chondroblastic subtype. Unfortunately, both patients died, one before the planned chemotherapy regime could begin, the second during the chemotherapy course. Our report aims to highlight the importance of the diagnostic profile in formulating a diagnosis of osteosarcoma, and that this tumor, although very rare, may be primary or may metastasize to the jaws.
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PMID:Clinical and histopathological profile of primary or secondary osteosarcoma of the jaws. 2219 20


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