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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (sarcoma)
25,952 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors assessed a panel of immunohistochemical stains against 109 pediatric solid tumors, primarily rhabdomyosarcomas, under the auspices of the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study. Fresh tumor tissue received from participating organizations was divided into portions that were either frozen or fixed in formalin, alcohol, or B5. Immunostaining was performed by the avidin-biotin complex method using monoclonal antibodies to desmin, neurofilaments, vimentin, cytokeratin, and leukocyte common antigen on cryostat sections. Tissue was also embedded in paraffin and stained with antimuscle-specific actin (MSA) and polyclonal antibodies to desmin, creatine kinase M subunit (CKM), myoglobin, and neuron-specific enolase (NSE). Antidesmin staining of cryostat sections was the most sensitive indicator of rhabdomyosarcoma (58 of 62 specimens positive). Results with this reagent in alcohol-fixed and formalin-fixed tissue were similar (46 of 56 positive versus 43 of 56 positive, respectively) and comparable with results with anti-MSA in formalin-fixed tissue (43 of 55 positive). However, the proportion of cells stained by antidesmin was higher in alcohol-fixed tissue than in formalin-fixed tissue. Staining with antimyoglobin and anti-CKM was much less satisfactory, with positivity rates of 17 of 37 and 11 of 57, respectively, in formalin-fixed rhabdomyosarcomas. Immunostaining of muscle markers revealed evidence of myogenesis in six undifferentiated sarcomas and in two sarcomas with inadequate histologic study on hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections. However, positivity was also noticed in samples of fibromatosis, Wilms' tumor, ectomesenchyoma, peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor, renal rhabdoid tumor, myositis ossificans, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, and embryonal sarcoma of the liver. The authors conclude that combined use of antidesmin and anti-MSA enhances the diagnosis of childhood sarcomas, especially when employed with other techniques such as electron microscopic study.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study of childhood rhabdomyosarcomas and related neoplasms. Results of an Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma study project. 171 May 39

Monoclonal antibodies to keratin, vimentin, leukocyte common antigen (LCA) and S-100 protein have been used in fine needle aspirates of 35 metastatic malignant melanomas, 136 carcinomas, 35 sarcomas and 82 non-Hodgkin's lymphomas in search for immunocytochemical criteria useful in differential diagnosis of melanoma versus carcinoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and sarcoma. All melanomas expressed vimentin and did not express keratin. Six of 14 melanomas contained S-100 protein. All carcinomas were keratin positive. Some were also vimentin positive. All sarcomas expressed vimentin. Synovial sarcomas were also keratin positive. All NHLs were vimentin positive, keratin negative. All NHLs except one expressed also LCA. It is concluded that keratin, vimentin and LCA are useful markers in differential diagnosis of malignant melanoma versus carcinoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in fine needle aspirates when used together with morphologic and clinical data. However, in differential diagnosis of malignant melanoma and sarcoma these markers are of little use.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical criteria in the differential diagnosis of malignant melanoma versus carcinoma, lymphoma and sarcoma in fine needle aspirates. 184 82

The occurrence of pseudomalignant ulcerative change in seven specimens from the colon and rectum of six patients is described. In all cases, there was surface ulceration of a polypoid lesion which contained granulation tissue and acute and chronic inflammation. There was an underlying inflammatory pseudopolyp in four lesions, a juvenile polyp in one lesion, an adenomatous polyp in one lesion, and a benign retention polyp in one lesion. Within the stroma of all cases were numerous atypical cells that mimicked a malignant neoplasm. The atypical cells expressed vimentin in immunohistochemical studies; no expression of keratins, leukocyte common antigen, factor VIII, Ulex europaeus, carcinoembryonic antigen, actin, or desmin was found. Recognition of this lesion is important, as confusion with carcinoma, lymphoma, sarcoma, or a viral infection may easily occur.
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PMID:Pseudomalignant ulcerative change of the gastrointestinal tract. 198 79

Although anaplastic large-cell Ki-1 lymphomas can mimic a variety of tumors, a correct diagnosis is usually not difficult to reach if it is recognized that lymphoma cells can assume bizarre and pleomorphic appearances and that the pattern of growth can be purely sinusoidal. We report a unique case of a 45-year-old man presenting with a leg lesion that showed sarcomatoid growth patterns. The subcutaneous/dermal tumor displayed a myxoid stroma reminiscent of myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma. In a subsequent lymph node biopsy, a well-developed storiform pattern was formed by interweaving fascicles of plump spindle and oval neoplastic cells, reminiscent of pleomorphic/storiform type of malignant fibrous histiocytoma. The lymphoid nature of the tumor cells was documented by immunoreactivity for leukocyte common antigen, Ki-1 antigen, and the T-cell marker UCHL1. We conclude that the presence of a storiform or myxoid pattern does not disqualify the diagnosis of lymphoma; this possibility should always be pursued in pleomorphic tumors because the treatment is substantially different from that for sarcoma, carcinoma, or melanoma.
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PMID:Sarcomatoid variant of anaplastic large-cell Ki-1 lymphoma. 174 86

Epithelioid sarcoma (ES) occasionally may be confused, both clinically and histologically, with isolated necrobiotic granulomas (ING), leading to misdiagnosis and potential mismanagement of these conditions. We studied 11 cases of ES and 11 of ING (6 examples of deep granuloma annulare and 5 of rheumatoid nodule) immunohistochemically, in an attempt to determine whether they could be diagnostically separated by such means. Monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratin polypeptides (CK), epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), and leukocyte common antigen (LCA) were applied to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections in each case, using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique. All ES cases stained positively for CK, and 6 expressed EMA, while examples of ING were non-reactive for these antigens. Conversely, the large epithelioid histiocytic cells in cases of ING were immunoreactive with anti-LCA, whereas no case of ES displayed this determinant in tumor cells. In the latter lesions, reactive peritumoral inflammatory cells were LCA-positive, but were readily distinguished from neoplastic cells on morphological grounds, as well as by their negativity with anti-CK and anti-EMA. Based on these data, it is concluded that immunohistologic stains for epithelial and hematopoietic antigens are valuable in the conclusive diagnostic separation of epithelioid sarcoma and necrobiotic granulomas.
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PMID:Epithelioid sarcoma and isolated necrobiotic granuloma: a comparative immunocytochemical study. 243 1

The immunohistochemical study of 60 cases of rhabdomyosarcomas made it possible to test eight different antibodies currently used in tumour pathology: i.e., antisera to vimentin, desmin, myoglobin, cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, S100 protein, neurofilaments, and leukocyte common antigen. Vimentin was found in 58 cases (97 per cent), desmin in 49 cases (82 per cent), myoglobin in 23 cases (38 per cent), S100 protein in 7 cases (12 per cent), and cytokeratin in 3 cases (5 per cent). Other markers were negative. S100 protein was present in large round tumour cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm (round rhabdomyoblasts), whereas cytokeratin was present in small tumour cells similar to those observed in rhabdoid sarcoma. This unexpected staining should become common knowledge for the correct interpretation of the immunohistochemical study of small cell tumours in the young.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study of rhabdomyosarcoma. Unexpected staining with S100 protein and cytokeratin. 245 82

Clear cell sarcoma (CCS) is an uncommon, clinicopathologically distinct neoplasm that typically arises in association with tendons and aponeuroses. It shares several histologic and ultrastructural features with malignant melanoma. Clear cell sarcoma occasionally may be confused with other tumors of soft tissue that have a predominantly epithelioid appearance, including epithelioid leiomyosarcoma, epithelioid neurofibrosarcoma, synovial sarcoma, and epithelioid sarcoma. To assess the potential contribution of immunohistochemistry to this differential diagnosis, a panel of immunostains was applied to examples of each of these neoplasms. All six CCSs contained vimentin, and five were reactive with the melanoma-specific monoclonal antibody HMB-45. In addition, five CCSs expressed neuron-specific enolase, four cases displayed S100 protein, and four examples contained LN3 antigen. Synaptophysin and Leu-7 antigen were present in one case each. Cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, desmin, muscle-specific actin, and leukocyte common antigen were invariably absent. No other primary epithelioid neoplasm of soft tissue reacted with HMB-45. Clear cell sarcoma could be separated from epithelioid leiomyosarcoma by the presence of desmin and muscle-specific actin in the latter neoplasm. Similarly, both synovial sarcoma and epithelioid sarcoma differed from CCS by their expression of cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen. Clear cell sarcoma and malignant melanoma were immunohistochemically indistinguishable, supporting the concept that they share a common pattern of differentiation.
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PMID:Clear cell sarcoma. An immunohistochemical analysis of six cases and comparison with other epithelioid neoplasms of soft tissue. 252 Dec 88

The antigen recognized by a newly produced monoclonal antibody (bra55; IgG1) elicited by the non-T, non-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line REH 6, was expressed on all examined hemopoietic neoplastic cell lines (including non-T, non-B, T, B and myeloid leukemia cell lines), but not on examined nonhemopoietic human tumor cell lines (such as carcinoma, sarcoma, melanoma and neuroblastoma cell lines), as demonstrated by indirect immunofluorescence and enzyme-linked immunoassay. Specific immunoprecipitation of 125I-lacto-peroxidase radioiodinated cell surface proteins and sodium metaperiodate/tritiated sodium borohydride 3H-radiolabeled cell surface sialoglycoproteins followed by electrophoretic analysis (SDS-PAGE) demonstrated that the immunoprecipitated antigen is a cell surface 200 kDa sialoglycoprotein (on the non-T, non-B ALL cell line REH 6), with variation in its electrophoretic mobility (in the Mr range of 170,000-210,000) on different examined cell lines. These properties are characteristic for the leukocyte common antigen (LCA, T200). Immunoperoxidase staining of several normal and malignant tissues, as well as some nonhemopoietic tumor tissues confirmed the type of antigen tissue distribution pattern characteristic for LCA.
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PMID:Human neoplastic cell line distribution, immunoprecipitation and immunohistopathological study of a gp200 cell surface glycoprotein (LCA) detected by a monoclonal antibody elicited with an ALL cell line. 296 36

The immunohistochemical findings in 14 epithelioid sarcomas, neoplasms of uncertain histogenesis, indicate that they react with antibodies against cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, and vimentin. All cases were nonreactive for leukocyte common antigen, myoglobin, and Factor VIII-related antigen. These results point to the fact that epithelioid sarcoma expresses phenotypic characteristics more often associated with epithelioid neoplasms, rather than the mesenchymal profile of most soft tissue sarcomas. One explanation for this observation is that epithelioid sarcoma is in fact a carcinoma originating in the deep soft tissues. On the other hand, the pluripotential mesoderm has a known embryonic capacity to differentiate into epithelium and, therefore, it is plausible that epithelioid sarcoma is a mesenchymally derived neoplasm. Aside from histogenetic considerations, epithelioid sarcoma may be confused with a number of other neoplastic and granulomatous processes. Differential immunohistochemical stains are useful in selected instances wherein light and electron microscopic findings are diagnostically equivocal.
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PMID:Epithelioid sarcoma. An immunohistochemical study. 354 16

We report the cases of two men, aged 48 and 71 years, with granulocytic sarcoma of the testis. Both presented with left testicular swelling and underwent orchiectomy, which revealed cream-colored to yellow-tan, rubbery-to-firm, testicular tumors with extensive paratesticular spread. The tumor in the younger patient was composed of a uniform population of primitive cells with scant cytoplasm and was initially misinterpreted as malignant lymphoma. Staging revealed no extrascrotal spread. The patient was treated with radiation and chemotherapy and remained free of disease for 12 years, at which time he died of unrelated causes. The older patient had a history of a myelodysplastic syndrome. His tumor contained cells with bright eosinophilic, occasionally granular cytoplasm, consistent with myeloid lineage. Because of a prominent component of myelocytes, with round, eccentric nuclei and moderately abundant cytoplasm, and because of an associated chronic inflammatory cell infiltrate that contained mature plasma cells, the tumor was initially misinterpreted as a plasmacytoma, although it was reinterpreted as a granulocytic sarcoma before initiation of therapy. Tumor cells in both cases were positive with a chloroacetate esterase stain. Immunohistochemical staining revealed expression of myeloperoxidase, lysozyme, leukocyte common antigen, and CD43, but not of B-cell-specific or T-cell-specific antigens in both cases. Granulocytic sarcomas are apt to be misinterpreted as other hematolymphoid tumors, which may result in a significant error in management. The diagnosis should at least be thought of any time the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma or plasmacytoma of the testis is being considered.
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PMID:Granulocytic sarcoma of the testis: a report of two cases of a neoplasm prone to misinterpretation. 911 Feb 93


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