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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A new human epithelioid sarcoma cell line (ES020488) was established from a cutaneous metastasis in 26-year-old man, and was morphologically characterized in vitro and in vivo by comparison with the original tumor. The ES020488 cells showed a male karyotype ranging from 39 to 83 chromosomes, with various abnormalities but no specific pattern. The cells were round, polygonal or spindle-shaped with abundant cytoplasm and round nuclei containing prominent nucleoli; they proliferated in a sheet-like pattern. Tumors transplanted into nude mice revealed essentially the same features as the original tumor. Both in vitro and in vivo, the cells immunohistochemically expressed vimentin, cytokeratin, and EMA, but not desmin and S-100 protein. Ultrastructural study revealed irregular or round nuclei containing abundant euchromatin and prominent nucleoli, many intermediate filaments running irregularly or around the nucleus, and a number of filopodia-like processes. ES020488 cells were thus proven to retain and exhibit the unique morphological characteristics of an epithelioid sarcoma both in vitro and in vivo. These cells are possibly derived from synovioblastic mesenchyme.
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PMID:Morphological characterization of a new human epithelioid sarcoma cell line, ES020488, in vitro and in vivo. 768 33

The finding of cytokeratin positivity in non-epithelial cells in 9/15 cases of performing or penetrating gastric ulcer is reported. Two different monoclonal anti-cytokeratin antibodies were used and both produced a strong positivity in spindle and polyglonal cells in the gastric wall. These cells were often distributed near the peritoneal surface, but they were also found in central parts of the gastric wall. The cytokeratin-positive cells had no connection with the gastric mucosa, lacked epithelial features in routinely stained sections and were not positively stained by antibodies to other epithelial markers (EMA and Ber-Ep 4). Many of the cytokeratin-positive cells were also positive for vimentin. There was no evidence of malignancy in any of the cases, but cytokeratin-positive cells like those in the present study may be erroneously interpreted as infiltrating carcinoma. The true nature of the cytokeratin-positive cells was not revealed in the present study. It is concluded that cytokeratin positivity must be evaluated with care and that it is valuable to add antibodies other than anti-cytokeratins for the recognition of epithelial cell differentiation.
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PMID:Immunoreactivity to cytokeratins in non-epithelial cells in deep gastric ulcer. 769 92

Although clear cell carcinomas have been described in numerous anatomic sites, their occurrence in the gallbladder and extrahepatic bile ducts (EHBD) is practically unknown. We report 10 such cases. Seven arose in the gallbladder and three in the EHBD; all patients with gallbladder tumors were females with cholelithiasis whose ages ranged from 56 to 68 years. Patients with EHBD tumors were younger (38 and 40 years of age) and had extrahepatic biliary obstruction and abdominal pain. Two patients with gallbladder carcinomas had elevated serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels, and another without hepatic involvement had markedly elevated circulating levels of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). Histologically, nine tumors were adenocarcinomas and one was a squamous cell carcinoma. Seven adenocarcinomas consisted of cords, sheets, nests, papillae, and trabeculae of clear cells with well-defined cytoplasmic borders. Two were composed predominantly of glands and papillary structures. The cells contained PAS-positive diastase-labile granules and were cytokeratin- and EMA-positive and immunoreactive for erythropoiesis-associated antigen. One gallbladder tumor contained areas of hepatoid differentiation, a feature described in gallbladder neoplasms only once before. These areas were AFP-positive and immunoreactive for CEA. By electron microscopy, they showed hepatoid differentiation with formation of bile canaliculi. In two gallbladder tumors, neoplastic cells contained subnuclear vacuoles reminiscent of early secretory endometrium. Foci of conventional adenocarcinoma or mucinous carcinoma were recognized in all nine tumors. The squamous cell carcinoma showed only foci of squamous differentiation with keratinization. The clear cells of this neoplasm had a trabecular and solid growth pattern. These clear cell neoplasms of the gallbladder and EHBD must be differentiated from metastatic renal cell carcinoma, based upon the presence of areas of conventional adenocarcinoma or foci of squamous differentiation since results of special stains and immunohistochemistry are similar in both neoplasms. One of the patients with EHBD carcinoma is alive and symptom-free 6 years following right hepatic lobectomy. Five patients with gallbladder tumors had direct extension into the liver and died with metastases. Two are living with metastases.
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PMID:Clear cell carcinomas of the gallbladder and extrahepatic bile ducts. 780 41

Occasionally variants of meningeal hemangiopericytomas (HPC) may be confused with primary and secondary tumours of the meninges by virtue of their features and patterns of growth. Until now, a specific immunohistochemical marker for HPC could not be identified. HPC are reported to express factor XIIIa (F XIIIa) in the cytoplasm of the tumour cells. In an effort to assess the diagnostic value of F XIIIa for meningeal HPC, we investigated 38 primary meningeal tumours (6 HPC, 28 meningiomas of various subtypes, 4 meningeal sarcomas) and 23 secondary meningeal tumors (8 metastatic carcinomas, 6 gliosarcomas, 9 anaplastic gliomas) with anti-F XIIIa antibody. All HPC revealed 5%-20% of F-XIIIa-positive neoplastic cells. Malignant fibrous histiocytomas and gliosarcomas with MFH-like structures also exhibited multiple F-XIIIa-positive cells. Most of the F-XIIIa-positive cells in meningiomas were identified as macrophages. Furthermore, there was a population of small dark cells of uncertain histogenesis. Cells with positive immunoreactivity for F-XIIIa in metastatic carcinomas and gliomas apparently were of macrophage lineage. Though, in some cases, it would have been difficult to distinguish reactive from neoplastic cells without simultaneous immunohistochemical investigation with antibodies for macrophages, cytokeratin, EMA and GFAP. Because of these uncertainties, wo believe that the potential of F XIIIa-antibody in obtaining precise differential diagnostic information is limited.
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PMID:Factor XIIIa immunoreactivity in primary and secondary tumours of the meninges. 790 1

An 82-year-old male presented with a two-month history of hoarseness. A 2 cm pedunculated lesion was removed from the base of his epiglottis. Microscopy showed a polypoid atypical spindle cell lesion. Multiple levels failed to reveal an invasive squamous cell carcinoma. On the basis of haematoxylin and eosin stained sections the main differential diagnosis was a pseudosarcoma with an overlying dysplastic squamous mucosa or infiltrating spindle cell carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry showed positive staining for vimentin but no convincing staining with antibodies to cytokeratin and EMA. Ultrastructural analysis also failed to reveal epithelial characteristics. Ploidy analysis by static cytophotometry of the spindle cell proliferation revealed an aneuploid stem line with a DNA index of 1.67. On the basis of this the process was felt unlikely to be reactive and a diagnosis of a spindle cell squamous carcinoma was made. This diagnosis was subsequently supported by a clinical recurrence of the nodule at a six-month follow-up.
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PMID:Pseudosarcoma of the larynx: the value of ploidy analysis. 802 62

In a randomized design we examined the interobserver variation in the histopathological diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the lung and malignant mesothelioma. In three rounds, three pathologists assessed slides from 42 tumours originally diagnosed as adenocarcinomas, malignant mesotheliomas or benign lesions in the pleura. In the first round the assessments were made on haematoxylin and eosin (H & E) stained sections; in the second, on H & E sections plus sections stained with histochemical mucin stains; and in the final round, the diagnoses were made on H & E sections and sections stained with a panel of antibodies against various antigens (cytokeratin, EMA, CEA, Ber-EP4, B72.3, Leu-M1, vimentin and S-100 protein) said to be of value in the differential diagnosis. The overall interobserver agreements for the three rounds were 0.659, 0.802 and 0.817; the kappa values were 0.461, 0.681 and 0.690. It is concluded that differentiation between adenocarcinoma of the lung and malignant mesothelioma should be made on sections stained with H & E and mucin and/or immunohistochemical staining reactions, including antibodies against B72.3, Ber-EP4 and CEA.
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PMID:The histopathological diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma v. pulmonary adenocarcinoma: reproducibility of the histopathological diagnosis. 806 83

Glomus tumors are benign lesions composed of vessels and glomocytes in varying proportions. The histological appearance of the tumors depend upon the ratio of the vascular to the glomus cells and their differentiation as well as upon the amount and composition of the stroma. The aim of the present study was the establishment of criteria for the distinction of glomus tumor-like malformations from neoplasms with glomus cell differentiation. Using a panel of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies (vimentin, a-smooth muscle actin, desmin, pan-keratin, low molecular weight cytokeratin, EMA, NSE, S-100 protein, Factor VIII, a1-ACT) glomus tumors could be separated into three types: vascular, cellular with myxoid stroma and cellular, solid type. In the first two types the tumor growth is composed of all three components found in normal glomus body, but in a haphazard fashion and thus might be considered as tumor-like malformations. The third type is composed of perivascular arranged cells most of which acquire the phenotypical characteristics of glomocytes. This last tumor probably represent the neoplastic variant of the group of lesions designated by the term glomus tumor.
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PMID:Glomus tumor. A histological, histochemical and immunohistochemical study of the various types. 806 87

A case of extramammary Paget's disease of the axilla in an 84-year-old patient is presented. No underlying carcinoma was found and the lesion was treated successfully by wide local excision. Immunohistochemical staining showed nuclear immunoreactivity for c-myc and cytoplasmic staining for CEA, EMA, CAM 5.2, EGRF, c-erbB-2 and pan-cytokeratin in all the Paget cells. No immunoreactivity of the lesion was observed for S-100 protein, pan-ras, H-ras, K-ras, and p53 oncoproteins. Further research is needed to establish whether oncoprotein overexpression plays a role in the pathogenesis of extramammary Paget's disease and can be used as a diagnostic or prognostic marker.
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PMID:Extramammary Paget's disease of the axilla. 807 May 99

Seven cases of PCNP were studied; 5 females and 2 males, ages ranging from 21 to 68 years (mean 39). All had asymptomatic masses located in the head (3), body (2), isthmus (1) and tail (1). In 4 of them fine-needle aspiration (FNA) was done and showed a diagnostic pattern with papillary clusters as well as isolated epithelial cells with monomorphic appearance, round nuclei and inconspicuous nucleoli; 5 cases had a surgical resection and only 2 a biopsy due to unresectable tumors. Histologically, they showed the typical features of PCNP with solid, papillary, trabecular and cystic patterns. IHQ studies showed positivity for cytokeratin (n = 5), alpha-1-antitrypsin (n = 4), monoclonal NSE (n = 3), chromogranin (n = 3) and estrogen receptors (n = 1). All cases were negative for insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, EMA and CEA. DNA analysis done with an image analyzer showed 4 diploid tumors, 2 diploid-tetraploid an 1 aneuploid tumor. One patient died because of postoperative complications and the remaining 6 are alive with a mean follow-up of 17 months (2-36). We emphasize the diagnostic appearance of the tumor on FNA, and the low grade malignant potential of this neoplasm supported by the predominance of diploid tumors. Our IHQ findings suggest both an exocrine and endocrine differentiation.
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PMID:[Papillary and cystic tumors of the pancreas. Clinico-pathological, cytopathological, immunohistochemical, and nuclear ploidy study]. 808 43

48 cases of osteosarcoma, including 18 cases of osteoblastic type, 16 of fibroblastic type and 14 of chondroblastic type, were studied in accordance with Dahlin's classification. All specimens were stained with 11 specific markers using immunohistochemical ABC methods. Positive immunostaining for BMP was found in all of these cases. The results showed 48 vimentin positive cases, 46 actin positive cases, 5 keratin positive cases and 4 desmin positive cases. Neither cytokeratin nor EMA was identified in any of the cases. Positive reactions to S-100 protein, collagen type IV, UEA-1 and factor XIII were observed in 26, 20, 36 and 13 of the cases respectively. The results of this study confirm that osteosarcoma possesses the unique multidirectional differentiation potential toward osteoblastic, chondroblastic, myofibroblastic, fibrohistiocytic and epithelial cells, and also indicate that immunophenotypic analysis is useful for the diagnosis, differential diagnosis and classification of the tumor cells of osteosarcoma.
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PMID:[Osteosarcoma cell immunophenotype and heterogeneity]. 816 96


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