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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (
sarcoma
)
25,952
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There has been persistent controversy regarding the nature of cell differentiation in alveolar soft-part
sarcoma
(ASPS) since its first description in 1952. Some studies suggest that ASPS might represent an unusual variant of skeletal muscle tumor. Given the availability of new monoclonal antibodies to probe for skeletal muscle differentiation and the rapid advance in immunocytochemical techniques for deparaffinized, formalin-fixed tissue sections, we wished to test the proposed hypothesis that ASPS might represent a new type of rhabdomyosarcoma. Twelve archival samples of ASPS were retrieved, and we investigated the expression of two myogenic regulatory proteins, MyoD1 and
myogenin
, as well as other muscle-associated proteins, using sensitive immunocytochemical techniques. Despite the presence of desmin immunostaining in six ASPSs, no tumors were positive for either muscle actin or myoglobin. Most importantly, no specimen showed nuclear expression of MyoD1 or
myogenin
. In 11 tumors, however, there was considerable granular immunostaining in the tumor cell cytoplasm with the anti-MyoD1 monoclonal antibody 5.8A, a phenomenon observed in various nonmuscle normal and neoplastic tissues with this antibody. To analyze the exact nature of immunostaining of MyoD1 and desmin in ASPS, biochemical analyses using available fresh frozen tumor tissue were performed. Although a 53-kDa band was noted with antidesmin antibody on Western blot analysis, no specific protein band that corresponds to the 45-kDa MyoD1 was detected with antibody 5.8A. These results confirm the presence of desmin in ASPS but argue against authentic expression of MyoD1. They also suggest that the cytoplasmic immunostaining observed with anti-MyoD1 antibody 5.8A most likely represents a nonspecific cross-reaction with an unknown cytoplasmic antigen. Considering the master role that MyoD1 and
myogenin
play in skeletal muscle commitment and differentiation and the lack of expression of these two proteins in ASPS as determined immunocytochemically and biochemically, we think that the histogenesis of ASPS remains unknown.
...
PMID:Does alveolar soft-part sarcoma exhibit skeletal muscle differentiation? An immunocytochemical and biochemical study of myogenic regulatory protein expression. 873 64
Previous studies have shown that exogenous insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) can stimulate the terminal differentiation of skeletal myoblasts in culture and have established a correlation between the rate and the extent of IGF-II secretion by muscle cell lines and the rate of biochemical and morphological differentiation. To investigate the hypothesis that autocrine secretion of IGF-II plays a critical role in stimulating spontaneous myogenic differentiation in vitro, we have established C2 muscle cell lines that stably express a mouse IGF-II cDNA under control of the strong, constitutively active Moloney
sarcoma
virus promoter, enabling us to study directly the effects of IGF-II overproduction. Similar to observations with other muscle cell lines, IGF-II overexpressing myoblasts proliferated normally in growth medium containing 20% fetal serum, but they underwent enhanced differentiation compared with controls when incubated in low-serum differentiation medium. Accelerated differentiation of IGF-II overexpressing C2 cells was preceded by the rapid induction of
myogenin
mRNA and protein expression (within 1 h, compared with 24-48 h in controls) and was accompanied by an enhanced proportion of the retinoblastoma protein in an underphosphrylated and potentially active form, by a marked increase in activity of the muscle-specific enzyme, creatine phosphokinase, by extensive myotube formation by 48 h, and by elevated secretion of IGF binding protein-5 when compared with controls. These results confirm a role for IGF-II as an autocrine/paracrine differentiation factor for skeletal myoblasts, and they define a model cell system that will be useful in determining the biochemical mechanisms of IGF action in cellular differentiation.
...
PMID:Overexpression of insulin-like growth factor-II induces accelerated myoblast differentiation. 884 19
Diffuse tenosynovial giant cell tumor (DGCT) could present as a large intra-articular mass (pigmented villonodular synovitis, or PVNS) or as an extraarticular mass, which might be confused with a
sarcoma
, particularly when growth is destructive and giant cells are few. Prompted by a DGCT in which a subpopulation of cells was desmin positive and in which an erroneous diagnosis of myosarcoma was made, we analyzed the frequency of desmin,
myogenin
, MyoD1, and muscle-specific actin immunoreactivity in 45 well-characterized GCTs. We also analyzed a subset of these cases with antibodies to smooth muscle actin, as well as macrophage, follicular dendritic cell, extrafollicular dendritic cell, and dermal dendrocyte-associated antigens. Sections from 45 cases of formalin-fixed GCTs (22 DGCTs, 13 cases of PVNS, and 10 localized GCTs) were immunostained for desmin,
myogenin
, MyoD1, and muscle-specific actin. The eight cases that showed the largest number of desmin-positive cells were immunostained for smooth muscle actin, CD45, CD68, CD21, CD35, cytokeratin 8, and Factor XIIIa. Desmin-positive cells were seen in 20 (43%) of 45 cases: 10 (43%) of 22 DGCTs, 5 (38%) of 13 cases of PVNS, and 5 (50%) of 10 localized GCTs. In contrast, none were positive for any of the other muscle-associated proteins. In almost all of the cases, the desmin-positive cells were large and dendriform, with long processes that interdigitated between adjacent round cells. Desmin immunoreactivity was found in almost 50% of all GCTs, in the absence of positivity for other muscle markers. Desmin immunoreactivity in GCT seemed to be confined to a variably sized subpopulation of large dendritic cells whose exact identity remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Tenosynovial giant cell tumors: evidence for a desmin-positive dendritic cell subpopulation. 979 19
Angiomatoid "malignant" fibrous histiocytoma (AMFH) has been considered to be a low-grade
sarcoma
of childhood, and, with its fibrous pseudocapsule, angiomatoid change, dense lymphoplasmacytic response, and proliferation of spindled or round cells, has been classified as a fibrohistiocytic neoplasm. We wanted to study the clinicopathologic and immunophenotypic features of a large number of these tumors and to especially further explore their myoid differentiation. Cases coded as AMFH from 1979 to 1995 were retrieved from the Soft Tissue Registry of the AFIP. Only cases that met the criteria for AMFH by light microscopy were included, a total of 158 cases. Immunohistochemistry was obtained on 98 cases. Clinical history on 92% of all cases revealed a gender ratio of 1.3 females: males, age range of 2 to 71 years, median size of 2.0 cm, and a distribution of extremities > trunk > head and neck, with 66% lesions occurring in areas of normal lymphoid tissue. All tumors with available margins were well-circumscribed. Eighty percent of cases had some degree of lymphoplasmacytic infiltration; 50% cases had pseudovascular spaces filled with blood. Fifty-two percent had predominantly round cell morphology; 48% had a predominantly spindle cell pattern. Desmin positivity was noted in 51% cases and occurred in both predominantly round cell and spindle cell tumors. Most of the desmin-positive cases with adjacent lymphoid infiltrate (67%) showed scattered similar, desmin-positive cells in the surrounding lymphoid infiltrate, adjacent to the tumor. Muscle-specific and smooth-muscle actins were seen in 14% cases. Heavy-caldesmon was strongly positive in 3%, and calponin was focally positive in 73% and extensively positive in 12% cases. MyoD1, myoglobin, and
myogenin
(myf4) were negative in all tumors studied. Forty-five percent of cases were positive for CD99; 52% of these had round cell morphology. Fifteen percent of cases were positive for KP-1. All tumors were positive for vimentin and negative for CD21, CD35, S100 protein, CD34, keratins 8/18, and lysozyme. Clinical follow-up on 86 patients indicated that only 1 patient was alive with a local nodal metastasis (1% frequency of metastasis) within 1 year, and 2 others had local recurrence, all over a mean follow-up period of 6 years. The myoid, primarily myofibroblastic, phenotype of these lesions is supported by desmin, calponin, and occasional actin positivity. The occasional heavy-caldesmon and smooth muscle actin additionally suggest rare smooth muscle phenotype; however, lack of skeletal muscle markers indicate no relationship of AMFH to skeletal muscle tumors. The resemblance of these lesions to lymph nodes, clinically and morphologically, the finding of similar desmin positive cells in the adjacent lymphoid infiltrate, and the fact that 66% cases were found in sites of normal lymphoid tissue raise the possibility that some of these lesions may arise from or be related to myoid cells of lymphoid tissue. AMFH has an almost invariably benign behavior, but the 1% metastatic rate warrants its classification as low-grade "malignant." The predominantly round cell, CD99-positive and desmin positive AMFH cases, respectively, should not be confused with Ewing's sarcoma/PNET or rhabdomyosarcoma, respectively.
...
PMID:Angiomatoid "malignant" fibrous histiocytoma: a clinicopathologic study of 158 cases and further exploration of the myoid phenotype. 1057 14
In 1952, Christopherson et al. proposed that alveolar soft-part
sarcoma
(ASPS) was a distinct entity with unique clinical and pathological features. Since their report, its histogenesis has not been determined. In order to clarify the histogenesis of ASPS, a study using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction using cDNAs from MyoD1 and
myogenin
, and the actin filament from human-skeletal-muscle-related mRNAs has been performed in 5 cases of ASPS. The expression of MyoD1 and
myogenin
was determined in 5 and 2 cases of the 5 cases, respectively. Moreover, expression of the many mRNAs from the actin filament of skeletal muscle was also found in ASPS. According to these findings, it is now postulated that ASPS is of skeletal muscle origin.
...
PMID:RT-PCR suggests human skeletal muscle origin of alveolar soft-part sarcoma. 1083 98
Pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma (PRMS) is a rare and controversial tumor of skeletal muscle phenotype. Diagnostic criteria for PRMS by combined histology and currently available immunohistochemistry have not been clearly defined. We report 38 pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcomas in adults, explore morphologic variants, and discuss our experience with both specific and nonspecific skeletal muscle markers in these tumors. Clinical data, morphology, and immunohistochemistry were reviewed. Electron microscopy was performed. Of 38 cases, there were 28 males and 10 females. Patient ages ranged from 21 to 81 years (median = 54 y; mean = 51 y). Tumors were located in the lower extremity (n = 18), abdomen/retroperitoneum (n = 6), chest/abdominal wall (n = 5), spermatic cord/testes (n = 4), upper extremity (n = 3), and one each in the mouth and orbit. Tumor sizes ranged from 1.5 to 15.0 cm (mean = 7.3 cm; median = 6.8 cm). The cases were divided into three variants, each with large, atypical, pleomorphic polygonal rhabdomyoblasts (PRMB) with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm in varying numbers and different morphologic backgrounds of round or spindled rhabdomyoblasts (RMB). 1. Classic PRMS: Predominantly atypical PRMB in sheets (n = 8). 2. Round cell PRMS: Clusters of PRMB throughout the tumor with a background of slightly atypical, medium-sized, round, blue RMB (n = 13). 3. Spindle cell PRMS: Scattered PRMB in a predominance of atypical spindled RMB arranged in a storiform growth pattern (n = 17). Immunohistochemistry revealed the following: myoglobin (37/38), MyoD1 (19/36), skeletal muscle
myogenin
(myf4; 19/34), fast skeletal muscle myosin (4/5), desmin (36/38), muscle-specific actin (MSA; 25/35), smooth muscle actin (SMA; 15/33), and muscle specific
myogenin
(myf3; 25/35). Immunohistochemistry was supportive of skeletal muscle differentiation with at least one positive skeletal muscle-specific marker (myoglobin, MyoD1, fast skeletal muscle myosin, or myf4). In addition, all cases had some positivity for nonspecific muscle markers (desmin, MSA, SMA, myf3). Electron microscopy (EM), performed on eight selected cases from all three morphologic groups, demonstrated definitive skeletal muscle differentiation in all cases. Follow-up, available on 30 (79%) cases, revealed that 70% of patients died of disease (mean 20 months, range 1 month-108 months), 3% were alive with disease at 12 months (n = 1); and 27% had no evidence of disease (mean, 83 mo; range, 18 to 108 mo). PRMS, a tumor of predominantly middle-aged adult males in the lower extremity, can be diagnosed by the morphologic presence of scattered PRMB with immunohistochemical evidence of at least one skeletal muscle-specific marker. There are three morphologic variants of PRMS. The appropriate diagnosis of PRMS is significant as it is a high-grade
sarcoma
, with an aggressive clinical course.
...
PMID:Pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcoma in adults: a clinicopathologic study of 38 cases with emphasis on morphologic variants and recent skeletal muscle-specific markers. 1140 62
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), the most common
soft tissue sarcoma
of childhood, displays a variety of histologic patterns. Immunohistochemistry is used extensively to distinguish RMS from its mimics. Myogenin and MyoD1, myogenic transcriptional regulatory proteins expressed early in skeletal muscle differentiation, are considered sensitive and specific markers for RMS and are more specific than desmin and muscle-specific actin and more sensitive than myoglobin. Previous studies have focused on expression of
myogenin
and MyoD1 in small round cell tumors. This study assesses
myogenin
and MyoD1 in rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes and spindle cell tumors considered in the differential diagnosis of RMS. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archival tissue from 32 RMS, 107 non-RMS, and 11 benign skeletal muscle samples was stained for
myogenin
and MyoD1 with standard immunohistochemical techniques. Nuclear positivity was scored on a three-tiered scale. All RMSs expressed
myogenin
. Alveolar RMS (ARMS) showed strong nuclear staining, especially in tumor cells lining fibrous septae and perivascular regions. In cases with a subtle alveolar architecture on routinely stained sections,
myogenin
highlighted and enhanced visualization of the alveolar morphologic pattern. Embryonal RMSs (ERMSs) were more variable in
myogenin
staining pattern and intensity. No cases of nodular fasciitis, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor, myofibrosarcoma, leiomyoma, leiomyosarcoma, or alveolar soft part
sarcoma
stained for
myogenin
. Focal nuclear reactivity was seen in desmoid (2 of 10), infantile myofibromatosis (2 of 10), synovial sarcoma (1 of 10), and infantile fibrosarcoma (2 of 10). Non-neoplastic skeletal muscle fiber nuclei stained positively for
myogenin
in both tumor-associated samples (25 of 40) and benign skeletal muscle samples (5 of 11). Although all RMSs were immunoreactive for MyoD1, cytoplasmic and nonspecific background staining and reactivity of nonmyoid tissues hindered its practical utility in paraffin-embedded samples in this study. Although
myogenin
is a highly sensitive and specific marker for RMS, it is rarely seen in other spindle cell soft tissue tumors. As previously reported, ARMS stained more strongly than ERMS. In contrast to previous studies, rare non-RMS (7 of 107) displayed focal nuclear reactivity, and entrapped atrophic or regenerative skeletal muscle fibers also stained positively. Although these are potential pitfalls in the interpretation of
myogenin
, careful attention to morphology and other features, to the relative paucity of
myogenin
-positive nuclei in non-RMS. and to the presence of entrapped muscle fibers should prevent incorrect interpretation. Because the extent of
myogenin
expression in RMS is much greater than in non-RMS, it is a very useful marker when interpreted in the context of other clinicopathologic data.
...
PMID:Are myogenin and myoD1 expression specific for rhabdomyosarcoma? A study of 150 cases, with emphasis on spindle cell mimics. 1168 74
Sarcoma botryoides, which usually occurs in the vagina in childhood, is rare in the female reproductive tract of adult women, especially those over the age of 40. We present a case of
sarcoma
botryoides of the uterine cervix that was an incidental finding in a 46-year-old woman. The tumor formed a grape-like cervical polyp that was locally excised, but rapidly recurred. Total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy were performed. The myxoid tumor had a cambium layer and was composed of spindle-shaped myoblastic cells without apparent cross-striations. The tumor cells were immunoreactive for MyoD1 and
myogenin
. Postoperative chemotherapy (vincristine and actinomycin D) was given according to the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study protocol, and the patient was alive without recurrence 45 months postoperatively. This is the only the fourth case reported in detail of a
sarcoma
botryoides of the uterine cervix in a patient over the age of 40.
...
PMID:Sarcoma botryoides of the uterine cervix in a 46-year-old woman: case report and literature review. 1466 57
Arpp, a protein including an ankyrin-repeat, P EST motif, and p roline-rich region, is a recently identified protein that is exclusively expressed in striated muscles. This study comprehensively analyzed its expression among soft tissue sarcomas of various histological types and evaluated its potential use for the differential diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, including 37 RMS cases, 88 non-RMS sarcomas, and 38 carcinomas, were analyzed for Arpp expression. Arpp was detected in 33 (89.2%) of 37 RMS cases by immunohistochemistry. Western blot analysis revealed expression of Arpp in all RMS cases tested. High expression of Arpp was generally associated with morphological evidence of skeletal muscle differentiation of tumor cells. In contrast, Arpp displayed 6.3% (8/126) positivity among the non-RMS tumors. Focal or weak expression was seen in malignant fibrous histiocytoma (2/27), synovial sarcoma (1/11), Ewing sarcoma (1/5), and epithelioid
sarcoma
(3/5), whereas one epithelioid
sarcoma
displayed strong expression for Arpp. A comparative analysis of the Arpp profile with that of myogenic markers in RMS revealed that the sensitivity of Arpp (89.2%) was higher than that of myoglobin (59.6%) and comparable with that of
myogenin
(88.2%), MyoD (80.6%), muscle-specific actin (83.8%), and desmin (89.2%). These results suggested that Arpp is sensitive to and specific for RMS. Thus, we proposed that Arpp is a novel skeletal muscle-specific marker, which is useful for differential diagnosis of RMS.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of a muscle ankyrin-repeat protein, Arpp, in paraffin-embedded tumors: evaluation of Arpp as a tumor marker for rhabdomyosarcoma. 1602 67
Soft tissue sarcomas
in the first year of life are rare, and the most common sarcomas in infancy are embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor, congenital infantile fibrosarcoma, and primitive sarcomas such as undifferentiated
sarcoma
. In this study, we report 6 cases of a primitive myxoid mesenchymal tumor of infancy (PMMTI), which previously may have been included under the diagnostic categories of congenital-infantile fibrosarcoma or infantile fibromatosis. PMMTI occurred in 6 infants, 3 of whom had a congenital presentation of a soft tissue mass. All patients were otherwise healthy. The tumors occurred on the trunk, extremities, and head and neck. Grossly, the tumors were nonencapsulated and had a multinodular appearance with focal infiltrative growth, a white fleshy cut surface, and a tumor diameter ranging from 2 to 15 cm. Histologically, a diffuse growth of primitive spindle, polygonal, and round cells occurred in a myxoid background. The tumor cells were arranged in a vaguely nodular pattern with peripheral collagenized stroma, higher cellularity at the periphery, and a delicate vascular network in the background. Immunohistochemically, the tumors displayed diffuse reactivity for vimentin and no reactivity for smooth muscle actin, muscle specific actin, desmin, S-100 protein, or
myogenin
. Electron microscopy documented a poorly differentiated fibroblastic proliferation. Four cases tested negative for the ETV6-NTRK3 gene fusion by RT-PCR. One tumor had a complex karyotypic abnormality with rearrangements involving chromosomes Y, 9, and 3. Three patients had recurrences or metastasis treated with a combination of surgery and chemotherapy. One patient is alive with persistent locally aggressive disease, 2 are alive with no evidence of recurrence, 1 had a recurrence treated surgically without further follow-up information, 1 patient died with persistent tumor and sepsis 6 weeks after diagnosis, and 1 patient was lost to follow-up. The morphologic appearance combined with the ultrastructural features and absence of the typical gene rearrangement of congenital-infantile fibrosarcoma are unique, and we propose that PMMTI represents a new category of pediatric fibroblastic-myofibroblastic tumor.
...
PMID:Primitive myxoid mesenchymal tumor of infancy: a clinicopathologic report of 6 cases. 1653 60
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