Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During a systematic, immunocytochemical screening of 40 human cutaneous melanomas (30 primary and 10 metastatic) for immunophenotype (IP) heterogeneity, we employed a library of 20 well characterized, commercially available mono- and polyclonal antibodies. The use of the sensitive, indirect, four to six step immunoperoxidase or alkaline phosphatase conjugated streptavidin-biotin antigen detection technique provided excellent results. The immunocytochemically most characteristic IP for primary cutaneous melanoma, as detected by us was: HMB45+, S-100+, CEA+, vimentin+, cytokeratin 19+, p53+, Rbgene+, nm23+, HLA-DR+, HL.A-DP+, c-erbB3/HER-3+/-, cytokeratin 10/13+/-, HLA-DQ-, cytokeratin 5/8-, EMA-, c-myc-, and actin-. During melanoma progression, a tendency toward poor differentiation (dedifferentiation) and an increase in c-myc expression have both been observed, the latter downregulating HLA-A,B,C expression and consequently diminishing the possibility of melanoma cell Iysis by powerful CD8+, cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) or other cytotoxic cells which requires HLA class I antigens. The development of the metastatic potential in melanomas caused an increase in CEA expression, eliminated the presence of nm23, and prompted the appearance of actin among the intermediate filaments, composing the cytoskeleton of these malignant tumor cells. The most characteristic IP for MMs, identified by this study was HMB45+, S-100+, CEA+, EMA+, vimentin+, HLA-DR+, HLA-DP+, cytokeratin 19+, actin-, c-erbB3/HER-3+, p53+, cytokeratin 10/13+/-, c-myc+/-, c-erbB2/HER-2+/-, HLA-DQ-, cytokeratin 5/8-, Rb gene-, nm23-. It has been observed that adhesion molecules and integrins play a significant role in the complex process of melanoma metastasis and thus we propose a blocking of these de novo expressed molecules with the appropriate antibodies as a form of immunotherapy of PMs and early stages of MMs.
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PMID:Immunophenotypically varied cell subpopulations in primary and metastatic human melanomas. Monoclonal antibodies for diagnosis, detection of neoplastic progression and receptor directed immunotherapy. 861 65

Epidermotropic metastases from internal malignancies are exceedingly rare. We report two examples of epidermotropic metastatic breast carcinoma with striking intraepidermal involvement. The first case mimicked melanoma because the neoplastic cells contained melanin and were disposed both as single units and as nests at the dermoepidermal junction and throughout the epidermis. In the second case, the neoplastic cells were seen as isolated neoplastic cells with large, pale cytoplasm scattered throughout the epidermis, closely resembling extramammary Paget's disease. Immunohistochemical studies in both cases demonstrated the epithelial nature of intraepidermal neoplastic cells, which showed an immunophenotype identical to the neoplastic cells present in the dermis: positive staining with anti-cytokeratins, CEA, EMA, and GCDFP-15 and negative with anti-S-100 protein and HMB-45. These findings ruled out the possibility of a collision lesion, or simultaneous occurrence of melanoma and metastatic breast carcinoma. Pagetoid intraepidermal spread of metastatic breast carcinoma, as in our two cases, is exceptional. We also discuss the histogenetic similarities between our findings and those of mammary and extramammary Paget's disease, as well as the differential diagnosis of other cutaneous disorders characterized by pagetoid intraepidermal spread of neoplastic cells.
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PMID:Epidermotropically metastatic breast carcinomas. Rare histopathologic variants mimicking melanoma and Paget's disease. 887 3

Paraffin-embedded specimens from 21 patients (mean age 49 years) with malignant melanocytic tumors of the central nervous system were studied. Extraneuronal primary tumors were situated at the trunk (38%), the lower (14%) or upper extremity (10%), and the head/neck region (5%). In 33% no extraneural primary tumor could be detected. The tumor location was frontal (19%), occipital (19%), parietal, spinal, multifocally (14%, respectively), or temporal (5%). Four subtypes were distinguished according to the predominant histological cell type: pleomorphic, epithelioid, spindle- and mixed-cell tumors. 29% contained no melanin, most of them belonging to the epithelioid subtype. The morphology and immunohistochemical reactivity for different antibodies (KL-1, EMA, VIM, HMB-45, NKI-C3, S-100, and MIB-1/Ki-67) were assessed. Positive staining was demonstrated for HMB-45 (in 86% of cases), NKI-C3 (100%), S-100 (95%), vimentin (75%), and KL-1 (33%). No expression of the cytokeratin EMA could be detected. The mean proliferation index measured by MIB-1 immunoreactivity was 21%. The 4 histological subtypes were found to express different antigen patterns. In the analysis of CNS tumors of unknown origin, the panel of antibodies used for diagnosis should include HMB-45 as the most specific marker for malignant melanoma.
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PMID:Malignant melanoma in the CNS, subtyping and immunocytochemistry. 940 2

Malignant melanoma of soft parts (MMSP) is a rare tumor originally described by Enzinger in 1965 as clear cell sarcoma of tendons and aponeuroses because of its affinity to tenosynovial structures. Tumors are found predominantly at the extremities. First visceral case was described in 1993 in the duodenum. We describe the case of 64-years old man with malignant melanoma of soft parts in the stomach, in the pancreas, in the mesocolon, in the left thigh and in the left axilla. This patient was successfully treated surgically by the resection of the stomach, resection of the pancreatic head, extirpation of the tumor from mesocolon, from the left thigh and from the left axilla. In all these localisations the tumor was histologically and imunohistochemically proved to be MMSP (positivity: s-100 protein, vimentin, HMB-45 and negativity CK, EMA, desmin, actin). This multivisceral occurrence is extremely rare and according to the review of literature this is probably the first published case of MMSP in the stomach and in the pancreas.
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PMID:[Malignant melanoma of soft parts (clear cell sarcoma)--a rare case of multiorgan localization]. 972 15

Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a malignant cutaneous neuroendocrine tumor which may be difficult to diagnose. It mostly occurs in old patients and the commonest sites are the skin of the head and neck and the extremities. MCC appears as a solitary violaceous dome-shaped nodule or indurated plaque. Histopathologic diagnosis may be difficult and three main patterns have been described. With immunohistochemistry studies, MCC express both epithelial (cytokeratins, EMA) and neuroendocrine (NSE, chromogranin, ...) markers. The tumor develops an aggressive course not unlike an aggressive melanoma. Local recurrence and regional lymph node metastases occur in 40 to 75% of cases. Long-term prognosis is unfavorable (3-year survival rate is 55%). Wide surgical excision associated with radiotherapy is the treatment of choice, regional lymph node metastases should be treated by lymph node excision and radiotherapy; chemotherapy should be used in systemic disease.
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PMID:[Merkel cell carcinoma]. 992 75

Rhabdoid tumor is a well-accepted clincopathologic entity among childhood renal neoplasms; similar tumors have been described in extrarenal locations. We present the clinicopathologic profile and the immunohistochemical features of a series of soft tissue rhabdoid tumors. Twenty-eight cases coded as extrarenal rhabdoid tumor (ERRT), RT, possible ERRT, and "large cell sarcoma" were retrieved from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology soft tissue registry. The tumors were reclassified according to strict criteria by light microscopy, clinical information, immunohistochemistry, and, in some cases, electron microscopy. Soft tissue rhabdoid tumor (STRT) was defined as (1) a tumor composed of noncohesive single cells, clusters, or sheets of large tumor cells with abundant glassy eosinophilic cytoplasm, an eccentric vesicular nucleus, and an extremely large nucleolus; (2) positivity for vimentin and/or cytokeratin or other epithelial markers by immunostaining; and (3) exclusion of other tumor types with rhabdoid inclusions (melanoma, other sarcomas, carcinoma). Eighteen cases met our criteria for soft tissue rhabdoid tumors. The median patient age was 13 years (range, 6 months to 56 years). Ninety-four percent of STRT cases were positive for vimentin and 59% for pan-cytokeratin. Sixty-three percent and 60% were positive for CAM 5.2 and EMA, respectively. Seventy-nine percent stained for at least one epithelial marker; 76% stained for both vimentin and epithelial markers simultaneously. Forty-two percent stained for MSA, and 14% for CEA and SMA. CD99, synaptophysin, CD57 (Leu-7), NSE, and focal S100 protein were identified in 75%, 66%, 56%, 54%, and 31% of the STRT cases, respectively. All STRT cases examined were negative for HMB-45, chromogranin, BER-EP4, desmin, myoglobin, CD34, and GFAP. Follow-up examination in 61% of the STRT patients revealed that 64% of patients died of disease within a median follow-up interval of 19 months (range, 4 months to 5 years); 82% had metastases to lung, lymph nodes, or liver; 22% had local recurrences before metastasis; and 18% were alive without known disease status (median, 5.5 years). Soft tissue rhabdoid tumor is a highly aggressive sarcoma, predominantly of childhood. Besides having nearly consistent coexpression of vimentin and epithelial markers, STRTs show positivity for multiple neural/neuroectodermal markers that overlap with those of primitive neuroectodermal tumor.
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PMID:Extrarenal rhabdoid tumors of soft tissue: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 18 cases. 993 May 72

A variety of cytomorphological features, architectural patterns and stromal changes may be observed in malignant melanomas. Hence, melanomas may mimic carcinomas, sarcomas, benign stromal tumours, lymphomas, plasmacytomas and germ cell tumours. Melanomas may be composed of large pleomorphic cells, small cells, spindle cells and may contain clear, signet-ring, pseudolipoblastic, rhabdoid, plasmacytoid or balloon cells. Various inclusions and phagocytosed material may be present in their cytoplasm. Nuclei may show bi- or multi-nucleation, lobation, inclusions, grooving and angulation. Architectural variations include fasciculation, whorling, nesting, trabeculation, pseudoglandular/pseudopapillary/pseudofollicular, pseudorosetting and angiocentric patterns. Myxoid or desmoplastic changes and very rarely pseudoangiosarcomatous change, granulomatous inflammation or osteoclastic giant cell response may be seen in the stroma. The stromal blood vessels may exhibit a haemangiopericytomatous pattern, proliferation of glomeruloid blood vessels and perivascular hyalinization. Occasionally, differentiation to nonmelanocytic structures (Schwannian, fibro-/myofibroblastic, osteocartilaginous, smooth muscle, rhabdomyoblastic, ganglionic and ganglioneuroblastic) may be observed. Typically melanomas are S100 protein, NKIC3, HMB-45, Melan-A and tyrosinase positive but some melanomas may exhibit an aberrant immunophenotype and may express cytokeratins, desmin, smooth muscle actin, KP1 (CD68), CEA, EMA and VS38. Very rarely, neurofilament protein and GFAP positivity may be seen.
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PMID:Morphological and immunophenotypic variations in malignant melanoma. 1079 80

Pericardial effusions are not uncommon in patients with an advanced malignancy Rarely malignancies may present initially with a pericardial effusion. Cytological examination of pericardial fluid may be valuable in differentiation of these cases. However, a metastatic tumour in serous effusion may not always show the functional differentiation of the primary tumour. In such a situation, although a wide range of special studies have been suggested for the diagnosis of malignancy we have found the use of a panel of a few common immunostains to be useful in confirming or suggesting the site of a primary tumour. The material for this study consisted of 76 pericardial fluids obtained between January 1991 and October 1998 from 46 males (mean age 59 years) and 30 females (mean age 52 years). Metastatic malignancy was diagnosed in 22 of the 76 patients and in 7/22 cases pericardial effusions were the initial presentation. The subsequent follow-up in the seven cases revealed adenocarcinoma of lung (n = 2), small cell anaplastic carcinoma of lung (n = 1), squamous cell carcinoma lung (n = 1), melanoma leg (n = 1), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma retroperitoneal lymph nodes (n = 1) and carcinoma of the breast (n = 1). Of the remaining 15 cases with a known history of malignancy, eight had cancers (three adeno; two small cell; one poorly differentiated, and two squamous cell types) of the lung; breast (n = 3); colon (n = 1); melanoma (n = 2) and non Hodgkin's lymphoma (n = 1). Immunostains which were useful in the diagnosis were EMA, CEA, cytokeratin, B72.3, HMB45, vimentin, S100, LCA, L26 and kappa and lambda light chains.
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PMID:The usefulness of a panel of immunostains in the diagnosis and differentiation of metastatic malignancies in pericardial effusions. 1101 58

Melanoma may present a great variety of cell morphology and mimic virtually almost all other neoplasms, and metastatic lesions pose major diagnostic difficulties. A typical immunoreactive profile of melanoma is: S-100p- and HMB-45-positivity, but these markers are not always present. Other new antigens for melanoma are NKIC3 and Anti-Melan-A (MART-1). This tumor may also present expression of unspecific markers, as cytokeratin, CEA, EMA, desmin, NFP, GFAP, CD68 and actins. We present here unusual features of two metastatic melanomas, showing the anaplastic pattern, immunopositive for desmin.
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PMID:Rhabdomyosarcomatous (myoblastic?) phenotype of metastatic malignant melanoma. A case report. 1214 Aug 74

A 37-year-old woman had a mass in her left ocular globe. Uveal melanoma was suspected and enucleation was performed. Microscopically, the lesion proved to be a typical case of mesectodermal leiomyoma of the ciliary body. According to some authors, the peculiar neural appearance of this tumor could be the reflection of its probable origin from mesectodermal smooth muscle. Immunohistochemical analysis showed reactivity for muscle-specific actin and negativity for desmin, S-100 protein, HMB-45, EMA, and GFAP. Our results do not support the proposed neuroectodermical origin of this tumor, since coexpression of muscular and neural markers was not observed.
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PMID:Mesectodermal leiomyoma of ciliary body. 1249 Sep 85


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