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We report a case of a 60-year-old female with a pigmented microcystic chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (PMCRCC). The tumor was 4.5 cm in diameter, and was located in the right kidney. Grossly, on cross section, the tumor was light gray with multiple small brown to black pigmented foci up to 0.2 cm in diameter. Histologically, the tumor showed a microcystic arrangement with cribriform areas and formation of adenomatous structures. The microcystic and cribriform areas were composed of larger pale cells and smaller eosinophilic cells, with cytological features of conventional chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (CRCC). The cytological features of the cells within the adenomatous structures were different. These cells were mostly columnar with nuclei at the base, and had a variable amount of pale to eosinophilic cytoplasm. There were foci of ample brown pigmentation located in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells and extracellularly. In addition, microscopic calcifications were present. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for EMA, E-cadherin, cytokeratin CAM5.2, and cytokeratin AE1/AE3. Cytokeratin 7 was positive only focally. S-100 protein, melan A, HMB 45, vimentin, and CD117 were negative. PMCRCC is a rare tumor. To the best of our knowledge, only one series containing 20 cases of this variant of CRCC has been described to date. The important feature is that PMCRCC seems to have a relatively benign biological behavior, and distant metastases and sarcomatoid transformation are absent.
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PMID:Pigmented microcystic chromophobe renal cell carcinoma. 1765

Primary myoepithelial tumors of soft tissue are uncommon, and criteria for malignancy among these neoplasms have only recently been established. Of 51 myoepithelial carcinomas of soft tissue in the literature, 11 occurred in children, 7 of which were included in a previous series of myoepithelial tumors from our group. We have collected an additional 22 cases of myoepithelial carcinoma of soft tissue in the pediatric population, and we describe the detailed clinicopathologic features of all 29 cases herein. There were 15 girls and 14 boys; age at diagnosis ranged from newborn to 17 years (median, 9 y). Sites included extremities (14 cases), trunk (6 cases), viscera (5 cases: 3 mediastinal, 1 retroperitoneal, and 1 intracardiac), and head/neck (4 cases). Histologically, the tumors were heterogeneous, with epithelioid, clear, spindle and/or plasmacytoid cells forming nests, cords or solid sheets in a myxoid or hyalinized stroma. Epithelioid cells predominated in the majority of cases (27 of 29; 93%) and in 10 cases (34%), tumor cells focally had scant cytoplasm with round cell morphology. The mitotic rate ranged from <1 to 68 per 10 high power fields (median, 8), and tumor necrosis was present in 14 cases. At least 1 broad-spectrum cytokeratin was positive in all tumors [CAM5.2 in 17 of 18 (94%), AE1/AE3 in 15 of 20 (75%), and PAN-K in 14 of 21 (67%)], and EMA was positive in 19 of 29 cases (66%). Either S100 or GFAP was positive in all but 4 cases [S100 in 21 of 29 (72%) and GFAP in 15 of 28 (54%)]. Clinical follow-up in 23 cases revealed that 9 patients had local recurrences (53% of the 17 patients who underwent complete excision with negative margins); 12 (52%) developed metastases; and 10 (43%) have died of disease so far, at a median interval of 9 months after diagnosis. Despite the relative rarity of carcinomas in the pediatric population, myoepithelial carcinoma seems to be disproportionately common among children and often has an aggressive clinical course.
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PMID:Myoepithelial carcinoma of soft tissue in children: an aggressive neoplasm analyzed in a series of 29 cases. 1804 35

We report a cribriform carcinoma of the left fossa poplitea in a 62-year-old woman. The patient did not present any symptoms, and the only complaint was the nodule, which was resected for diagnosis. After considering different diagnostic options, we decided that the most appropriate one was cribriform carcinoma, which is an entity described in 1998. The diagnostic criteria, which were provided in the few publications that refer to this entity, helped us to distinguish it from the main mimicker: cystic adenoid carcinoma. Owing to the cribriform pattern of the tumor, we also looked for a metastasis from other sites, mainly breast, vulva, and salivary glands, but all these were clinically excluded. The tumoral cells showed secretion by decapitation, as well as a positive stain of the luminal secretion by histochemical techniques of Alcian blue and periodic acid-Schiff. The tumor was negative for iron stain. In spite of these characteristics, which are, for some authors, indicative of an apocrine phenotype, the immunohistochemical study revealed some differences with the profile that has been described in cases of apocrine adenocarcinoma. The tumor did not express GCDFP-15 or CD 15. It was also negative for SMA, CEA, and PR. The pattern of cytokeratins expressed by our case was positive for AE1-AE3, CAM 5.2, and CK7, without any expression for CK20. Other markers expressed by the tumor were EMA, ER, c-erbB-2, p53, and S-100.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical phenotype of cutaneous cribriform carcinoma with a panel of 15 antibodies. 1808 81

Acral myxoinflammatory fibroblastic sarcoma (AMIFS) is a low-grade sarcoma that presents mostly in distal extremities of middle-aged patients. The clinicopathologic features, immunohistochemical profile and follow-up data of five cases (three men and two women; age 39-65 years) are presented. The tumors presented as a slow-growing, poorly circumscribed, subcutaneous masses in the hands (three), foot (one) and calf (one), with dermal involvement in two cases. They had myxoid and hyaline stroma with dense acute and chronic inflammation. Spindle cells, large bizarre ganglion-like cells and multivacuolated cells were seen. Variable reactivity in lesional cells were noted for vimentin, Alpha-1-antitrypsin (A1AT), factor XIIIa, CD68, CD95, CD117, Alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (A1ACT), CD34, AE1/3, S-100 protein, EBER, CD63 and CD15. MIB-1 showed 5-30% nuclear labeling. They were negative for cytokeratin AE1/3, smooth muscle actin, CD30, ALK-1, EMA, desmin, CMV, HMB-45 and Melan-A. Follow up ranged from 2 weeks to 95 months (mean 54). One patient was lost to follow up; three underwent excision and one patient had below the knee amputation. Two patients developed metastases (one died of disease), and two patients are alive without evidence of disease. AMIFS are rare tumors that may involve joints and tendons leading to clinical diagnosis of ganglion cyst or tenosynovitis.
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PMID:Acral myxoinflammatory fibroblastic sarcomas: are they all low-grade neoplasms? 1819 Apr 43

We report on a 60-year-old woman with neuroendocrine carcinoma of the left breast metastasizing to renal cell carcinoma (RCC) of the left kidney and to adrenal gland. A yellow, well-circumscribed tumor, 11 cm in largest diameter and limited to the kidney, was found. Histopathology revealed RCC with foci of neuroendocrine differentiation. Solid sheets of hyperchromatic epithelioid cells with high mitotic activity were found between typical clear cells of RCC. These cells were CAM5,2 and E-cadherin focally positive, synaptophysin and NSE weakly positive, CK19 moderately positive, and AE1-AE3 and EMA strongly positive. Chromogranin A, CD10, CK 14, CK 20, HER2 (score 1+), vimentin, and HMB45 were negative. The left adrenal gland contained multiple, separate foci of a tumor composed of neuroendocrine components. Because of the biphasic tumor in the kidney, extensive clinical examination and further analyses were recommended. Tumor in the left breast was revealed. Two months later, the patient underwent mastectomy with axillary lymph node dissection. The tumor was histologically and immunohistochemically similar to the neuroendocrine component within RCC. All axillary nodes were positive. To our knowledge, this is the first case of neuroendocrine breast carcinoma with metastasis to renal cell carcinoma and ipsilateral adrenal gland.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine breast carcinoma metastatic to renal cell carcinoma and ipsilateral adrenal gland. 1853 46

Malignant rhabdoid tumor, first described in the kidney of young infants, is a rare and highly aggressive neoplasm of controversial histogenesis that has been reported at many other sites, including the gastrointestinal tract. However, malignant rhabdoid tumor of the small intestine is very rare, with only seven cases published to date. We report a 70-year-old man who presented with abdominal pain and weight loss, and showed a perforated jejunal mass with disseminated metastases by imaging. The patient underwent partial jejunectomy and biopsy of a liver metastasis. Microscopically, the tumor was characterized by neoplastic cells with vesicular nuclei, large nucleoli and abundant eccentric cytoplasm with hyaline globular intracytoplasmic inclusions. Immunohistochemically, the neoplasm coexpressed vimentin and epithelial antigens (AE1/AE3, Cam 5.2, CK34betaE12, CK19 and EMA), most of them showing a peculiar immunostaining pattern in relation to the globular inclusions. Ultrastructurally, the inclusions corresponded to paranuclear whorls of intermediate filaments. The patient received postoperative chemotherapy but died 9 months after surgery. In summary, we report the exceptional case of an undifferentiated carcinoma of the jejunum with rhabdoid phenotype. As with tumors at other sites, recognition of rhabdoid morphology in small intestine neoplasms is of significance because the prognosis is extremely poor.
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PMID:Undifferentiated carcinoma of the jejunum with extensive rhabdoid features. Case report and review of the literature. 1913 90

A 49-year-old man, with a tumor shadow overlapping the heart on chest X-ray film was followed for 5 years. He was admitted because the tumor shadow enlarged. Chest CT scan showed a 6 x 7 cm in diameter extrapulmonary tumor at the Th8 and Th9 level, and a defect of the anterior margin of the thoracic vertebra is observed. Because thoracic CT-guided needle biopsy was not successful, total resection combined with thoracic vertebrae was performed. The tumor was under the parietal pleura and did not involve into the intrathoracic organs. Histological examination showed small round cells arranged in sheets and cord-like fashion in a mucinous stroma. On immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells were positive for S-100 protein, vimentin, AE1/3. CAM5.2, EMA and Alcian blue staining. Thus, we confirmed the diagnosis of chordoma. Chordoma is a rare malignant bone tumor that originates from notochordal remnants and accounts for about 1-4% of all malignant bone tumors. Intrathoracic mediastinal chordomas is extremely rare, representing only 3% of all chordomas.
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PMID:[A case of primary posterior mediastinal chordoma]. 1926 May 43

Synovial sarcoma (SS) is an uncommon malignant neoplasm of the soft tissues. It mainly affects the periarticular tissues of the extremities in young adults, but has been described at nearly all sites; nevertheless, the gastrointestinal tract is an exceptional location. We report a case of a primary synovial sarcoma of the duodenum in a 69-year-old woman. Histological study showed a monophasic pattern. The tumor cells demonstrated diffuse vimentin and Bcl-2 expression, partial EMA expression and focal AE1/3 positivity. The differential diagnosis includes gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Cytogenetic analysis confirmed the diagnosis, with detection of the X;18 translocation. The patient presented postoperative complications and died one month following the intervention.
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PMID:Primary monophasic synovial sarcoma of the duodenum confirmed by cytogenetic analysis with demonstration of t(X;18): a case report. 1933 41

We report a case of a 56-year-old male with a primary large cell neuroendocrine renal carcinoma. Grossly, the left kidney was enlarged by a solid tumor that measured 145 x 125 x 100 mm. Histologically, the tumor consisted of large cells with a moderate to abundant amount of eosinophilic cytoplasm. The nuclei were irregular, some of them with finely or coarsely granular chromatin, others with vesicular chromatin and prominent nucleoli. The tumor cells showed multiple mitotic figures (up to 32 mitoses/10 HPF). In some areas, the tumor cells were arranged in solid sheets; however, the predominant pattern was solid-alveolar, trabecular and cribriform. Large areas of tumor necrosis were found. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for synaptophysin, CD56 and CD57. Cytokeratin AE1/AE3, vimentin and CD10 were positive only focally. Chromogranin showed weak cytoplasmic positivity in rare tumor cells. Cytokeratin CAM5.2, cytokeratin 34betaE12, BerEP 4, EMA, TTF-1, cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 20, calretinin, serotonin, somatostatin, gastrin, calcitonin, glukagon and insulin were negative. Primary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the kidney is a rare tumor. To the best of our knowledge, only 3 cases of a tumor of this type have been reported to date.
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PMID:Primary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the kidney. 1957 58

We present the case of a 52-year-old Caucasian male, admitted to our institution for a verumontanum adenocarcinoma, partially resected endoscopically, a month earlier at another urological clinic. The prior pathological examination wasn't able to give diagnosis. The extensive assessment by clinical workup, ultrasound, flexible cystoscopy, CT scan, and MRI revealed a prostatic tumor extending from the verumontanum to the left lobe and seminal vesicle. The patient underwent radical prostatectomy. The pathological examination revealed a ductal like adenocarcinoma, positive on immunohistochemistry for pan cytokeratin (AE1/AE3), CD10, endomysial antibody EMA and progesterone receptors (PR) and negative for prostate specific antibody (PSA), prostatic specific acid phosphatase (PSAP) and androgen receptors (AR). Ductal like adenocarcinoma of the prostate with endometrioid immunohistological features in the absence of prostate markers is an unusual condition.
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PMID:Atypical ductal adenocarcinoma of the prostate with endometrioid immunohistological features. 1960 72


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