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)

We reviewed 18 cases in which morphology was intermediate between Hodgkin's disease (HD) and anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL). Eight cases exhibited the usual CD30+, CD15+/-, null cell phenotype of classic HD but were rich in neoplastic cells with sinusoidal infiltrating pattern. In this group, there was no expression of antigens (EMA, BNH9, CBF78) associated with ALCL, and only two were positive for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Ten EBV negative cases fit the description of HD like ALCL by variable expression of antigens unassociated with HD. EMA was clearly and strongly expressed in all ten, whereas antigens recognized by BNH9 and CBF78 were expressed in four and three cases, respectively. Focal expression of CD45 and CD43 was observed in half of these cases. In only one case was the t(2.5) translocation detected with the new monoclonal antibody, ALK1. Therefore, the expression of EMA, BNH9 and CBF78, often in concert without CD15 and without the specific translocation, appears currently to be the most probable phenotype and genotype of HD like ALCL. There was a tendency for aggressive behaviour of the disease considered HD like ALCL. Whether such patients will benefit from a therapeutic strategy that takes into account both phenotype and genotype remains to be discovered.
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PMID:The interface of Hodgkin's disease and anaplastic large cell lymphoma. 954 88

A 21-year-old man who had anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) of the null-cell type with multiple bone involvement is reported. On admission, he had symptoms of incomplete paraplegia and urinary and rectal incontinence. Workup studies for staging revealed para-aortic lymph node swellings and multiple bone involvement including skull, ribs, left iliac bone, and thoracic/lumbar spine. Because paraplegia was rapidly progressive, a decompression operation was performed. The biopsy specimen obtained from the lumbar spine revealed sheetlike proliferation of anaplastic large cells. These cells were positive for CD30 (Ki-1), EMA, vimentin, and p80NPM/ALK, and negative for CD3, CD20 (L26), and CD45 (LCA). Epstein-Barr virus-encoded small RNAs were not detectable in these cells. Thus, the patient was diagnosed as having ALCL of the null-cell type. He was treated with several courses of combination chemotherapy, and finally with total body irradiation plus high-dose chemotherapy supported by peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. However, soon after the treatment, the lymphoma cells massively infiltrated his bone marrow. He died of lymphoma 8 months after admission.
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PMID:Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma of null-cell type with multiple bone involvement. 987 67

Between 1987 and 1993, 77 of 2855 lymphomas included in the LNH87 protocol of the GELA as non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and reviewed by a panel of pathologists had a diagnosis changed to Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). Some of these lymphomas had been initially interpreted as anaplastic large-cell lymphoma Hodgkin-like (ALCL-HL subtype). The purpose of this study was to analyze the histologic pitfalls initially encountered, to define more clearly the diagnostic criteria of lymphomas placed in the gray zone around HL, and to follow the survival of these 77 patients affected with HL and initially treated with NHL regimens. The 77 cases of HL were reviewed by three hematopathologists and immunostained with a large panel of antibodies, including CD30, CD15, CD3, CD20, CD45, CD43, LMP-1, EMA, BNH-9, TiA1, and ALK1. Each case was classified according to the Lukes-Rye system and the British National Lymphoma Investigation (BNLI) grading. The initial clinical presentation of patients was analyzed, and the overall and event-free survival rates of the 77 patients were estimated. Among the 77 HLs, 46 were misinterpreted as NHL by primary individual pathologists (12 as ALCL, 8 as ALCL-HL, 12 as peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL), 6 as B-cell lymphoma, and 8 as unclassifiable NHL). The other 31 cases had been first considered by the panel as consistent with ALCL-HL (n = 18) or with PTCL (n = 13) and were changed later in view of an immunophenotype concordant with HL. Fifty-five percent of the patients completed the full NHL treatment. The 5-year event-free and overall survival rates were 54% and 77%, respectively. The current results indicate that lymphomas initially called ALCL-HL should not be regarded as a variant of ALCL, but as HL. The clinical consequences of misdiagnoses seem to be a lower event-free survival rate compared with that of classical HL, probably because of more relapses of initially inappropriately treated HL.
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PMID:Pathologic and clinical features of 77 Hodgkin's lymphoma patients treated in a lymphoma protocol (LNH87): a GELA study. 1122 99

Primary cerebral anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is very rare. We report on our experience with such a case and review the literature. A 46-year-old Taiwanese woman presented with headache, weakness of her right extremity, and limited eye movement. A solid mass (5 cm x 4 cm) at the left occipital lobe was almost completely removed. The neoplastic cells, some of which had reniform or embryo-like nuclei, were large and were admixed with abundant eosinophils, histiocytes, and some small lymphocytes. These neoplastic cells expressed CD30, CD43, granzyme B and T-cell intracellular antigen-1, but not ALK1, CD3, CD20, CD45, CD79a, cytokeratin, and EMA. They were positive for Epstein-Barr virus-encoded mRNA by in situ hybridization. Polymerase chain reaction study of formalin-fixed tissue showed a clonal gene arrangement of the T-cell receptor-gamma chain. ALCL of T-cell lineage with cytotoxic phenotype was diagnosed. The patient received cranial irradiation and has remained with no evidence of disease for 25 months of follow-up.
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PMID:Primary cerebral anaplastic large cell lymphoma containing abundant reactive histiocytes and eosinophils. A case report and literature review. 1156 30

The characteristic histologic features and immunophenotype are usually diagnostic and allow distinguishing CD30 positive T-cell lymphoma (including anaplastic large cell lymphoma) from classical Hodgkin's lymphoma. The latter differs by expression of CD15 and lack of CD45, pan-T antigens and ALK expression. We report nine cases of large cell hematopoietic neoplasms in which the neoplastic cells co-expressed CD30 and CD15, and had immunophenotypic and morphologic features of T-cell lymphoproliferative process. The average age of the CD15-positive group was 61.9 years; 6 cases occurred in men and 3 in women. The tumors were located in lymph nodes in 8 cases, and in liver in 1 case. Two cases expressed ALK protein. There were no statistically significant differences in phenotypic parameters between the CD15-positive and CD15-negative neoplasms (p>0.05). However, the CD15-positive group appeared to show a minor trend toward less positivity for EMA (44% versus 72%), ALK protein (22% versus 51%), and CD45RO (33.3% versus 83.3%, p=0.07), when compared to the typical CD15-negative neoplasms. In summary, although the co-expression of CD30 and CD15 is typical for classical HL, it may be also present in a subset of peripheral T-cell neoplasms including ALK-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Combined and sensible use of morphology and a broad immunophenotypic panel in cases with limited material and/or those with overlapping histologic patterns will best discriminate between HL and ALCL. It is incumbent upon the pathologist to distinguish between these two clinicopathologic entities, since treatment options and clinical outcomes differ.
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PMID:CD30-positive T-cell lymphomas co-expressing CD15: an immunohistochemical analysis. 1252 29

Neoplasms of unknown origin present a difficult diagnostic dilemma, particularly if they are very poorly differentiated. Adenocarcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas, and sarcomas can all be very difficult to diagnose if the light microscopic cytomorphology is sufficiently undifferentiated. Electron microscopy (EM) can either demonstrate differentiation or narrow the range of differential diagnoses. The authors report the case of a 64-year-old male who has been HIV positive for several years and was found to have expansile lytic lesions in several ribs and a thumb fracture associated with a soft tissue mass which was biopsied. The tumor was composed of very pleomorphic malignant cells without specific differentiation. The malignant cells stained positive for pancytokeratin (AE 1/3), EMA, CEA, CK20, and CK7. Rare cells had mucicarmine-positive intracytoplasmic droplets. They were negative for S-100, calretinin, CD45, MART-1, and vimentin. EM revealed intracytoplasmic lumina with long microvilli and many well-formed desmosomal junctions. The diagnosis was initially very broad. Immunohistochemistry narrowed the diagnosis to carcinoma, but EM alone was able to narrow the diagnosis to poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. In a neoplasm of unknown origin, EM can either narrow the differential significantly or, in the case of limited material, provide information that otherwise may not be attainable.
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PMID:Desmosomes and microvilli mean a lot: diagnosis of neoplasms of unknown origin using electron microscopy. 1277 6

A CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) cell line was established from the mononuclear cells isolated from pleural effusion of a patient with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The cell line's biological characteristics were analyzed. The results showed that the established cell line could survive and proliferate in RPIM 1640 medium; the Wright-Giemsa-stained cells were exactly similar to malignant cells of CD30+ ALCL in morphology, with many diffuse virus granules in cytoplasm; the cytochemical staining of the cells showed the following reactivity pattern: positive for acid phosphatase (ACP) and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), negative for peroxidase (POX), myeloperoxidase (MPO) and platelet peroxidase (PPO). The immunoprofile of the cells was positive for CD45, HLA-DR, CD30 and negative for EMA, CD34, CD38, CD2, CD3, CD4, CD7, CD8, CD10, CD15, CD19 and CD20. The cytogenetic analysis showed complicate d qualitative and quantitative abnormality of chromosomes, without typical t(2;5). It is concluded that the established cell line is CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma cell line.
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PMID:[Establishment of a human CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma cell line and its biological characteristics]. 1457 43

Allergic sensitisation of the airways occurs in the mucosa of the shock organ, or in the lymphatic stations draining these structures. The lymphatic structure closest to the nasal mucosa in humans is the adenoid and tonsils. Research done in respect to Waldeyer's ring on people dealing at the same time with allergy, is seldom the subject of dissertation in polish as well as world wide medical literature. In the enclosed dissertation, writers present the results of histopathological and immunohistochemical analysis of hyperplastic tonsils and adenoid, taken from children with coexisting atopy. The authors describe an immunohistochemical analyses of the hyperplastic human palatine tonsil. They present the expression of antigen CD3, CD20, CD45, CD68, EMA, SMA, Vimentin, Desmin, S-100, von Willebrand Factor, p35, Bcl-2, melanin, cytokeratin, estrogen receptor, progesteron receptor, kolagen IV and NSE in every region of pallatine tonsil. It is worthwhile to remark, that many of these cases, the presence of eosinophilia and subepithelial oedema was observed. Our immunohistochemical findings support the hypothesis that allergic sensitization takes place in the adenoid and tonsils. Furthermore, this study confirms that dendritic cells ad macrophages are involved and important in allergic disease.
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PMID:[Histopathological and immunological analysis of hyperplastic palatine tonsils and adenoids in children with coexisting atopic dermatitis]. 1459 70

Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is known to involve the bladder, either primarily or secondary. Anaplastic large cell lymphoma has not been documented at this site before. We report a case of a systemic anaplastic cell lymphoma in a 22-year-old man who presented with multisystemic symptoms and signs, including those suggestive of bladder disease. He was HIV-negative. Biopsy of the bladder showed a high grade lymphoma composed of large cells with nuclei containing prominent nucleoli. The tumor cells expressed CD30, CD45, EMA and ALK-1. A diagnosis of anaplastic large cell lymphoma, of null cell phenotype was made. The lymph node biopsy showed similar features on hematoxylin and eosin section. The patient was put on a regime of CHOP and is disease-free 33 months after diagnosis.
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PMID:Systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma presenting as a bladder neoplasm. 1516 Sep 69

Gastric lymphoepithelioma--like carcinoma, undifferentiated with lymphoid or medullary stroma, constitutes a 3.8% of gastric carcinomas. Microscopically it is similar to other lymphoepitheliomas, it has an expansive growth and better prognosis than other histologic types. A possible relation to Epstein Barr virus is presumed. A 56 year old female, gastrectomized due to a cancer (Billroth II) 31 years before, showed an ulcer lesion close to the anastomosis at endoscopy. A biopsy was taken with positive result and gastrectomy was performed. The surgical specimen included gastric stump, jejunoanastomosis, omentum and lymph nodes. It had a 4.5 cm, protruded ulcerated lesion, located in anterior wall, 1.5 cm from stomy. It was fixed in buffered formalin, routinely processed and stained with Hematoxilin--Eosin. Immunohistochemistry techniques for CKAE1-AE3, EMA, CEA, CD45, CD20, CD3 and CD45Ro, and PCR for Epstein Barr virus were performed. Microscopically it was constituted by an expansive proliferation of polygonal cells with barely eosinophylic cytoplasm and vesicular nuclei, arranged in small clusters or isolated, positive for CKAE1-AE3, EMA and CEA, with dense mature lymphoid infiltrate, both follicular and diffuse, positive for CD45, CD45Ro, CD3 and CD20. PCR technique for Epstein Barr virus was positive. This has been the first case of this type in our department since 1989. In addition to the peculiar characteristics of this variety, whose differential diagnosis must be made with lymphomas, the origin from gastric stump, where this complication appears with variable rates, the risk being related to the type of surgery and the time elapsed are relevant.
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PMID:[Lymphoepithelioma-like gastric carcinoma: unusual variant in postgastrectomy stump]. 1548 94


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