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Query: UMLS:C0403608 (
ureter
)
9,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Perivascular epithelioid cell tumors (PEComas) are rarely found in the urinary tract. The clinicopathologic characteristics of 10 cases, retrospectively collected from 5 medical institutions in 3 different European countries, are presented in this study. Male/female ratio was 3:7 and the average age at diagnosis was 62.7 years. Nine cases were sporadic and 1 showed germline mutation of the TSC2 gene. Eight cases were located in the kidney, 1 in the left adrenal and 1 in the right
ureter
. All of the patients were alive and free of disease at the time of last contact (mean follow-up, 14.1 mo). Four cases displayed a conventional morphology and 6 showed a prominent sclerotic stroma. By immunohistochemistry, melanocytic markers were consistently expressed, especially HMB-45 (10 cases), MiTF (9 cases), and Melan-A (6 cases).
Desmin
was expressed in 6 cases; 2 cases were positive for CD117; a single case showed TFE3 expression. pMAPK, mTOR, and pAKT demonstrated variable immunostaining with focal positivity in 7, 4, and 2 cases, respectively. Cytokeratins were repeatedly negative in all cases. PEComas in the urinary tract, especially in the renal region, may show a relatively high frequency of the sclerosing histologic subtype. Knowledge of the distinct histology and immunohistochemical profile is vital to correctly diagnose this rare entity.
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PMID:Rheb/mTOR/p70s6k Cascade and TFE3 Expression in Conventional and Sclerosing PEComas of the Urinary Tract. 2625 55
Aggressive angiomyxoma is a rare mesenchymal tumor. To discuss the clinicopathological characteristics, treatment and prognosis of aggressive angiomyxoma, four cases of aggressive angiomyxoma of soft tissue in abdominopelvic cavity were collected from January 2015 to August 2017 in Peking University International Hospital. The clinical data, imaging examination, histopathological features, immunophenotype, therapy and prognosis were analysed. The related literatures were reviewed. All of the patients were adult females, age range from 27 to 49 years and mean 33 years. The clinical complaint was abdominal distention with no definite predisposing factor, or occasional physical-exam finding with no obvious discomfort. Three cases were primary and one case was recurrent. Typical layered or swirled structural sign was presented by CT and MRI scanning of three cases. All tumors located in the pelvic cavity, and attached to the uterus, vagina, rectum, bladder or
ureter
. One case was involved in the abdominal cavity simultaneously,adhesive to the spine, inferior vena cava and spleen. The gross appearance of tumors was from 5 to 22 cm in maximum diameter. The sectioned surfaces were soft, solid, white or yellow-gray, focally accompanied by edema, mucoid degeneration or cystic change. Microscopic observation showed that tumor cells were short spindle shaped and little atypical, the stroma was loose like edematous mucus or collagen, and the vessels were rich in thin and thick-wall. Partially the vessel wall expressed hyaline degeneration. Also tumors might infiltrate surrounding tissue, such as fat or nerve. The immunohistochemistry results of all cases were estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor diffusely moderate positive,
Desmin
and smooth muscle actin mostly positive, whereas CD34 expressed only in vessel and S-100 protein, CD117 and Dog1 all negative. All the tumors were complete surgical excision. During follow-up, one case recurred the second time. Our conclusions are the diagnosis of aggressive angiomyxoma is based on pathological morphology supplemented by immunohistochemistry, and the tumor may relapse after surgical resection.
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PMID:[Clinicopathological analysis of aggressive angiomyxoma of soft tissue in abdomino-pelvic cavity]. 3056 89