Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0268596 (
EMA
)
2,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma is a rare soft tissue tumor that primarily occurs in children and adolescents and has a strong predilection for the distal portion of the extremities, especially the hands and feet. This report describes 22 previously unpublished cases arising in uncommon sites. Fifteen patients were male, and seven were female (age range, 2 to 43 years; median age, 9 years). The process typically presented as a painless mass and was present from 2 weeks to 11 years before resection. Sites of involvement were the back (n=8), knee region (n=5), thigh (n=3), forearm (n=3), elbow (n=2), and arm, not otherwise specified (n=1). The lesions were often adherent to dense fibrous connective tissue (eg, tendon, fascia, or periosteum) and ranged from 1.0 to 5.0 cm in maximum dimension. The process typically had an irregular contour and a firm, fibrous consistency. Sometimes minute foci with a calcific appearance were evident grossly. Microscopic examination showed spindled fibroblasts with a fascicular growth pattern and scattered epithelioid cells bordering chondroid foci with or without mineralization. Immunoreactivity was present for vimentin (six of six), muscle-specific actin (three of six), smooth muscle actin (three of six),
CD99
(five of five), CD34 (one of six), CD57 (one of six, trace),
EMA
(two of six, trace), S100 protein (five of six), CD68 (five of five), and progesterone receptor (one of six). The tumors were managed by local excision (n=20), incomplete local excision (n=1) and biopsy only (n=1). Follow-up information was available for 10 patients with a median follow-up interval of 94 months. Five patients (50%) developed one or more recurrences. Familiarity with this entity should help to avoid confusion with other processes, including infantile and extraabdominal fibromatoses, a chondroma of soft parts, and a fibrous hamartoma of infancy.
...
PMID:Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma: a clinicopathologic study of 22 cases arising in uncommon sites. 986 39
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.
...
PMID:Extrarenal rhabdoid tumors of soft tissue: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 18 cases. 993 May 72
Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a unique, highly aggressive neoplasm that chiefly affects male adolescents and young adults. This tumor is characterized by nests of small undifferentiated cells that show immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural differentiation. We report two cases of DSRCT that lacked immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial differentiation, but were found to have the fusion transcripts characteristic of this tumor. Both patients (a 41-year-old male and a 31-year-old female) presented with large intra-abdominal masses. After diagnostic biopsy, both were treated with multi-agent chemotherapy. One patient expired 18 days after diagnosis, and the other is currently alive 28 months later. Histologically, both tumors had the characteristic features of DSRCT and were composed of small round cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and scanty cytoplasm. In one of the cases, perinuclear intracytoplasmic hyaline inclusions were seen. Immunohistochemically, neither case expressed any of the epithelial markers tested, including AE1/AE3, CAM 5.2 and
EMA
. Both tumors were diffusely immunoreactive for desmin with a prominent globoid "dot-like" pattern of staining in one case. Both tumors stained for vimentin, neuron specific enolase, and synaptophysin, but were negative for
CD99
, muscle-specific actin, and myogenin. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction revealed EWS-WT1 fusion transcripts characteristic of this neoplasm. In conclusion, we describe two cases of DSRCT that lacked immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial differentiation but had histologic and other immunohistochemical features which suggested this diagnosis. The ability to confirm the diagnosis of this rare tumor using molecular genetic techniques is particularly useful in those cases with unusual histologic or immunophenotypic features.
...
PMID:Cytokeratin-negative desmoplastic small round cell tumor: a report of two cases emphasizing the utility of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. 1049 92
The tumor described here as lipofibromatosis is a rare pediatric neoplasm that has been variously interpreted as a type of infantile or juvenile fibromatosis, a variant of fibrous hamartoma of infancy, and a fibrosing lipoblastoma. This report details the clinicopathologic features associated with 45 cases of this soft tissue entity. The study group consisted of 32 males, 12 females, and one person of unstated gender. The patients presented with a soft tissue mass (range, 1-7 cm) involving the hand (n = 18), arm (n = 8), leg (n = 7), foot (n = 6), trunk (n = 5), or head (n = 1). Eight tumors were evident at birth. The individuals ranged in age from 11 days to 12 years (median age, 1 yr) at the time of initial biopsy or resection. Microscopic examination revealed abundant adipose tissue with a spindled fibroblastic element that chiefly involved the septa of fat and skeletal muscle. The process generally did not cause extensive architectural effacement of fat as is common with conventional fibromatoses, and it did not have a primitive nodular fibromyxoid component as is characteristic of fibrous hamartoma of infancy. The fibroblastic element exhibited focal fascicular growth and typically had limited mitotic activity (< or = 1 mitosis/ 10 high-power fields) and cytologic atypia. Oftentimes, small collections of univacuolated cells were present at the interface between some of the fibroblastic fascicles and the mature adipocytes. The tumors entrapped vessels (n = 45), nerves (n = 44), skin adnexa (n = 16), and skeletal muscle (n = 18). Focal immunoreactivity was present in some tumors for
CD99
, CD34, alpha-smooth muscle actin, BCL-2, and less frequently, S-100 protein, muscle actin (HUC 1-1), and
EMA
. However, no reactivity was detected for desmin (D33 and D-ER- 1 clones), keratins, or CD57. Follow-up data were available for 25 individuals (median follow-up period, 6 yrs 7 mos) with regrowth of the tumor or persistent disease documented in 17 (72%). The following events were more common in the group with recurrent or persistent disease: congenital onset, male sex, hand and foot location, incomplete excision, and mitotic activity in the fibroblastic element. Although it is likely this tumor comprises part of the spectrum of what has been referred to in the literature as infantile/juvenile fibromatosis, its clinicopathologic features and, in particular, its distinctive tendency to contain fat as an integral component, warrant separate classification as a "lipofibromatosis."
...
PMID:A clinicopathologic study of 45 pediatric soft tissue tumors with an admixture of adipose tissue and fibroblastic elements, and a proposal for classification as lipofibromatosis. 1107 50
Thymoma with psuedosarcomatous stroma is a recently described, rare variant of thymomas that are characterized by having a biphasic histologic pattern which consists of both an epithelial and a spindle cell stromal component. So far only 11 cases having similar histologic findings have been reported worldwide. At this time we report a case of this rare variant of thymoma which occurred in a 53-year-old Korean man. This previously healthy patient presented with coughing and an anterior mediastinal mass was then detected radiographically. Mediastinal exploration revealed a 9 x 8 x 8 cm-sized well- encapsulated, ovoid, cystic mass. Histological examination showed a biphasic neoplasm composed of anastomosing nests of epithelial cells and somewhat cellular stromal spindle cells that had advanced degenerative changes. Immunohistochemical staining using the antibodies for cytokeratins,
EMA
, e-cadherin, and p75NGFR showed a strong expression of these markers in the epithelial component but no expression in the spindle stromal cells. The epithelial tumor cells showed no reactivity to CD5 and L26 and a high proportion of the infiltrated lymphocytes were the cortical type that expressed
CD99
and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. Ultrastructural examinations revealed tonofilaments in the spindle cells. Follow up has been done for 5 years after the surgical excision and the patient has been free of disease during that period. Similar to previous reports, this patient had a benign clinical course that was unassociated with myasthenia gravis which appears to be a characteristic of this histologic variant of thymoma. However, our case also showed advanced degenerative features and we could demonstrate ultrastructural evidence of epithelial differentiation in the stromal spindle cells that were not mentioned in the previously reported cases. Based on the results of our studies, we suggest this entity is a distinct type of organotypic thymoma that shows cortical differentiation and abundant cellular stroma.
...
PMID:Thymoma with pseudosarcomatous stroma. 1167 89
Authors present an additional case report of pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor (PHAT), only recently recognized entity amongst the soft tissue tumors. 63-year-old man underwent surgery for subcutaneous tumor growing on the forearm. Grossly, ovoid well demarcated tumor 4.0 x 3.5 x 2.5 cm was removed. Histologically, hypovascular areas of spindle-cells arranged in sheets and fascicles resembling spindle-cell sarcoma and areas rich on ectatic vessels with fibrin deposits or thickened hyalinized walls were present. Some cells contained intranuclear cytoplasmatic inclusions, lobulated nuclei with or without prominent nucleoli or multiple nuclei. Mitoses were less than 1 per 30 HPF, Ki-67 nuclear positivity was observed in 2.6% of tumor cells. Immunohistochemically, cells were positive with vimentin, but negative for CD34, S100, desmin, smooth-muscle actin,
EMA
, VWF,
CD99
, bcl-2 and cytokeratins. The patient did well, without recurrent tumor after 13 months follow-up. Spectrum of tumors including solitary fibrous tumor, giant-cell angiofibroma, neurilemmoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma and acral myxoinflammatory tumor with atypical bizarre giant cells is discussed in differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor. 1181 37
Thymomas with the characteristic pattern of small epithelial nodules separated by an abundant lymphoid tissue have been recently described with divergent interpretations. These thymomas are not specified in currently used classification systems. We present six such thymomas, including three that represented 1.38% of a series of 217 consecutive cases. These thymomas were totally encapsulated (Masaoka stage I, n=1) or minimally invasive (stage II, n=5). The epithelial cells of the nodules were oval and bland-appearing. In one case, these cells formed rosettes. Cysts, that were present in four cases, showed a strong linear expression of
EMA
and were associated with foci of glandular differentiation. The lymphoid tissue was composed of large immature (CD1a and
CD99
-positive) T-cell areas (with epithelial cells restricted to small foci of residual thymus) and of B-cell (CD20-positive) areas with germinal centers. Mature T-cells were also present. Furthermore, one case, associated with myasthenia gravis, had an important WHO type B2 (cortical) component. Such a combined case has not been previously reported. Our study demonstrates that so-called micronodular thymomas are rare, usually have clinical and pathological features of WHO type A (medullary) thymomas, and that the lymphoid component is hyperplastic corresponding to both immature T-cell lymphoid tissue and B-cell lymphoid hyperplasia with germinal centers.
...
PMID:[Thymoma with epithelial micronodules and lymphoid hyperplasia: six cases of a rare and equivocal subtype]. 1241 Jan
A case of mesothelioma with a small cell component in a 53-year-old, non-smoker woman. The patient had a history of asbestos exposure, and presented with thoracic pain. A total body computed tomogram showed a left pleural effusion and a 7.5-cm pleural mass. Thoracoscopy revealed a diffuse nodular thickening of the left parietal pleura, and a biopsy was performed. The patient died of the disease 4 months after diagnosis. Microscopically, the pleural neoplasm was composed of three different components: 40% of the tumor showed the classic histology of a malignant epithelial mesothelioma, 40% was composed of small- to medium-sized cells with open nuclear chromatin, evident nucleoli and high mitotic activity, and 20% of the neoplasm was indistinguishable from a small cell carcinoma. Immunohistochemically, the first component was diffusely and strongly positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3, cytokeratin CAM 5.2 and
EMA
, focally positive for BER-EP4, and negative for CD15, B 72.3, CEA, LCA, chromogranin, synaptophysin, TTF-1 and
CD99
. The cells of the second component were positive only for cytokeratin AE1/AE3 and cytokeratin CAM 5.2, and the elements of the third component were negative for all the antibodies tested. Pleural mesothelioma with a small cell component is rare. The most useful parameters to distinguish it from other small cell malignancies that may involve the pleura, particularly small cell carcinoma of pulmonary origin, are discussed.
...
PMID:[Small-cell mesothelioma of the pleura: description of a case]. 1241 72
We describe a peculiar pulmonary lesion, that we interpreted as a pseudopapillary variant of solitary fibrous tumor. The patient was a 62-year-old asymptomatic male, non smoking, presenting with a peripheral nodule, 0.8 cm across, located in the lower lobe of the right lung. The patient is alive and well 18 months after surgical excision of the nodule. Microscopically, the lesion was well-circumscribed and characterized by a diffuse pseudopapillary pattern. Pseudopapillae were large, and were covered by a rim of cubic epithelium devoid of atypia. The stromal axis was fibrous and contained scattered bland spindle cells. Immunohistochemically, the latter were strongly positive for vimentin and CD34, focally positive for BCL2 and
CD99
, negative for cytokeratin,
EMA
, TTF1, calretinin, smooth muscle actin, desmin and S100 protein; the epithelial cells were immunoreactive for cytokeratin,
EMA
and TTF1. We interpret this lesion as a peculiar pseudopapillary variant of solitary fibrous tumor, corresponding to what has been reported in the literature as pulmonary adenofibroma and fibroadenoma. The most important differential diagnostic considerations are briefly discussed.
...
PMID:[Solitary fibrous pseudopapillary tumor of the lung: pulmonary fibroadenoma and adenofibroma revisited]. 1296 12
We report 2 primary renal synovial sarcoma. These tumors were formerly designated as embryonal cystic sarcoma of the kidney. Most cases are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50 years. Some cases show local recurrence after nephrectomy. On gross examination, tumors are large, partially necrotic, and usually contain cysts. Microscopically, tumors are characterized by monomorphic plump spindle cells. The cysts are lined by mitotically inactive epithelial cells without striking cellular atypia. The spindle cells were immunoreactive for
EMA
, CD56, and sometimes for
CD99
. They were non-reactive for desmin, actin, S 100, and cytokeratins. The cyst epithelium is cytokeratin positive. The presence of a SYT-SSX gene fusion resulting from the t(X;18) characteristic for synovial sarcoma was demonstrated by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in both tumors. Primary renal synovial sarcoma is a distinctive tumor entity, which should be considered in renal tumors consisting of spindle cells.
...
PMID:[Primary renal synovial sarcoma. A new entity in the morphological spectrum of spindle cell renal tumors]. 1460 53
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>