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Query: UNIPROT:A9QXG9 (
bcl-2
)
7,497
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We investigated the relationship between immunohistochemical estimates of proliferative activity and expression of
bcl-2
protein and mutant p53 protein in 23 cases of
soft tissue sarcoma
. Furthermore, the reproducibility of estimates of proliferative activity was analysed and correlations between the variables and with mitotic score were investigated. Proliferative activity was assessed by use of monoclonal antibody MIB-1 and staining for iododeoxyuridine (IdUrd), and evaluated in multiple, random, systematically sampled fields of vision. MIB-1 indices were higher than those of IdUrd but for each case the two values were positively correlated (r = 0.78). The MIB-1 index correlated positively with mitotic score (2P < 0.001) and malignancy grade (2P = 0.001). The intraobserver reproducibility of the MIB-1 and IdUrd indices were excellent (r = 0.98 and r = 0.90, respectively). p53 expression was detected in 43% and strong
bcl-2
expression was present in 57% of the studied cases. Expression of p53 and
bcl-2
were not significantly correlated to proliferative activity or the histological features. We conclude, that the MIB-1 index is a reliable and reproducible estimate of proliferative activity and might improve the accuracy of conventional malignancy grading of soft tissue sarcomas. Furthermore, the results indicate that neither mutant p53 protein nor
bcl-2
oncogene alone are sufficient to induce increased proliferation in these sarcomas.
...
PMID:MIB-1 expression and iododeoxyuridine labelling in soft tissue sarcomas: an immunohistochemical study including correlations with p53, bcl-2 and histological characteristics. 873 19
Information on prognostic factors is essential to establish appropriate therapeutic modalities for
soft tissue sarcoma
(
STS
). To evaluate the biological nature and prognostic factors of
STS
, p53 and
bcl-2
expression was immunohistochemically studied on paraffin-embedded sections from 70 patients with
STS
in the extremities and trunk. In addition, the degree of apoptosis was examined by in situ end-labeling. Histologic diagnoses in these cases were malignant fibrous histiocytoma in 29 cases, liposarcoma in 11, synovial sarcoma in 11, leiomyosarcoma in 5, malignant neurogenic tumor in 5, and others in 9. Tumor cells in 31 of 70 cases (44%) showed positive nuclear staining for p53 protein. There was no correlation between p53 expression and tumor size, histologic grade, argyrophilic nucleolar organizer region (AgNOR) count, cellularity and extent of neerosis. Expression of p53 did not correlate with survival of patients. Tumor cells in 24 of 56 cases (43%) were positive for
bcl-2
protein expression. The frequency of
bcl-2
expression in the tumor cells showed a direct proportion to tumor size (> or = 10 vs. < 10 cm) but inverse proportion to AgNOR counts and cellularity. The 5-year survival rate in patients with
bcl-2
-positive tumors (87%) was more favorable than in those with
bcl-2
-negative tumors (53%; p < 0.05). The frequency of apoptosis in low-grade
STS
was significantly higher than that in the intermediate and high-grade
STS
(p < 0.001). Extent of necrosis, a well-known prognostic indicator in
STS
, was not correlated with the frequency of apoptosis. Multivariate analysis showed that cellularity,
bcl-2
and AgNOR counts were independent prognostic factors in patients with
STS
. The current study revealed that
STS
with a higher expression of
bcl-2
had lower proliferative activity and larger size than those without. Immunohistochemical detection of
bcl-2
is useful for predicting prognosis in patients with
STS
.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of bcl-2 and p53 proteins and apoptosis in soft tissue sarcoma: their correlations with prognosis. 914 6
Inflammatory fibrosarcoma (commonly referred to as inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor) has become increasingly recognized as part of a spectrum of inflammatory myofibroblastic proliferations. It is a potentially locally aggressive myofibroblastic tumor that occurs predominantly in the mesentery of children and young adults. No reliable morphological parameters have been identified that predict prognosis. We evaluated the ultrastructural and immunophenotypic features of 16 cases of inflammatory fibrosarcoma and studied Ki67 (MIB1), PCNA,
bcl-2
, and p53 in an effort to identify prognostic markers. p53 was not detected immunohistochemically in any case. None of the markers were found to correlate with local recurrences, metastases, or tumor deaths. Low proliferative activity (Ki67 < 10%) was seen in all cases. A characteristic immunophenotype was reconfirmed in which lesional myofibroblasts stained for vimentin, alpha-smooth muscle actin, cytokeratins, and rarely desmin. Ultrastructural studies of seven cases confirmed the presence of a fibroblastic-myofibroblastic spectrum. Because inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-inflammatory fibrosarcoma is associated with systemic symptoms, polymerase chain reaction studies for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) were performed in 12 cases. Evaluable results in nine cases did not show evidence of either virus. The results of this study indicate that inflammatory fibrosarcoma has a low proliferative activity, which is in keeping with the impression that this is a low-grade
sarcoma
; that myofibroblasts can participate in true neoplasia; and that EBV and CMV do not play a role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory fibrosarcoma. The variable phenotype of the myofibroblast and its role in reactive and neoplastic processes are discussed. A perspective on the position of inflammatory fibrosarcoma in the spectrum of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors is also given in light of the current study and the literature.
...
PMID:Inflammatory fibrosarcoma: update, reappraisal, and perspective on its place in the spectrum of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors. 960 4
An immunohistochemical study to determine the pattern of immunoreactivity for
bcl-2
oncoprotein was performed in 380 spindle cell tumors of soft tissue, skin, serosal surfaces, and gastrointestinal tract. The cases studied included examples of benign, reactive spindle cell proliferations to benign and malignant spindle cell neoplasms, including nodular fasciitis (10), fibromatosis (5), dermatofibroma (10), dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (18), Kaposi's sarcoma (15), spindle cell lipomatous tumors (24), benign and malignant smooth muscle tumors (35), neural/peripheral nerve sheath neoplasms (53), synovial sarcomas (70) solitary fibrous tumors of serosal surfaces and other sites (56), gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) (47), and malignant undifferentiated fibroblastic spindle cell proliferations of soft tissue (37 cases). The results of
bcl-2
staining was additionally correlated with CD34 immunoreactivity. Bcl-2 was uniformly negative in all cases of nodular fasciitis, fibromatosis, and dermatofibroma, as well as in benign and malignant smooth muscle proliferations. Strong positivity for
bcl-2
was observed in all cases of spindle cell lipoma, dendritic fibromyxolipoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, solitary fibrous tumors, gastrointestinal stromal tumors, and in the spindle cell component of synovial sarcoma. With the exception of the last, there appeared to be a close correlation between the expression of
bcl-2
and CD34 in these tumors. Strong
bcl-2
positivity also was found, at least focally, in approximately one third of benign and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors, particularly in the better-differentiated (Antoni type A) areas.
Sarcomas
of fibroblastic type, including low-grade myxofibrosarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, and fibrosarcoma, showed variable expression of
bcl-2
in the tumor cells. Our results appear to indicate that
bcl-2
may have a wide distribution among benign and malignant spindle cell neoplasms. Strong expression of this marker in some of these conditions, particularly solitary fibrous tumor, gastrointestinal stromal tumors, and synovial sarcoma, may be of aid for differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Expression of bcl-2 oncoprotein in benign and malignant spindle cell tumors of soft tissue, skin, serosal surfaces, and gastrointestinal tract. 966 48
Twelve cases are described of a distinctive benign soft tissue lesion that may be mistaken for a
sarcoma
. The tumors occurred in 11 men and a woman aged 33 to 81 years (mean, 64 years), and measured from 2 to 11 cm in greatest diameter (mean, 6 cm). They were grossly described as soft, well-circumscribed, yellow-gray, with a mucoid cut surface. All cases were superficially located in the subcutis or muscular fascia of the head and neck region or the chest and back. Histologically, the tumors were characterized by a proliferation of spindle or stellate fibroblastic cells variably admixed with mature adipose tissue embedded in an abundant myxoid and collagenized stroma. The spindle and stellate fibroblastic cells were characterized by slender dendritic prolongations of their cytoplasm, which appeared to extend for short distances along connective tissue planes. Electron microscopy in two cases confirmed the dendritic nature of the fibroblastic cells, which showed elongated cytoplasmic processes lacking external lamina and displaying foci of pinocytotic activity. Immunohistochemical studies in 11 cases showed strong positivity of the spindle cells with vimentin, CD34 and
bcl-2
, and negative staining for smooth muscle actin, muscle-specific actin (HHF35), desmin, S-100 protein, keratin, and EMA. Because of their prominent myxoid stroma and relatively large size, some of these tumors were initially misinterpreted as low-grade sarcomas. Clinical follow-up in five cases, however, showed that the patients were alive and well without evidence of recurrence between 5 and 13 years (mean follow-up, 8 years) after simple local excision. The present cases appear to represent a distinctive form of benign soft tissue neoplasm that should be distinguished from myxoid liposarcoma and other benign and malignant myxoid tumors of superficial soft tissues.
...
PMID:Dendritic fibromyxolipoma: clinicopathologic study of a distinctive benign soft tissue lesion that may be mistaken for a sarcoma. 984 27
The clinical histories of 10 women suffering from benign metastasizing leiomyoma (BML) after hysterectomy and information on lung lesions detected in these women are presented, together with corresponding data for 2 women with metastasizing leiomyosarcoma of the uterus for comparison: gross appearance, survival, and light microscopical, immunohistochemical and lectin-histochemical findings are reported. All patients with BML had undergone hysterectomy for uterus leiomyomatosus without any detection of sarcomatous lesions in the uterus wall. After a median period of 14.9 years intrapulmonary masses were detected by imaging techniques. On average, six nodules with a mean diameter of 1.8 cm were seen. Resection of the lesions was performed in all cases. The immunohistochemical and lectin-histochemical examination of the tumors included analysis of the proliferation-associated protein Ki-67, the p53 protein, estrogen and progesterone receptor, sarcolectin as an indicator of the presence of lymphokine macrophage migration inhibitory factor, antibodies and the labeled protein to assess galectin (galactoside-binding animal lectin)-dependent parameters, analysis of tumor vascularization (CD-34), and expression of
bcl-2
, vimentin, smooth muscle actin, desmin, and keratin. The lesions were characterized by low proliferation activity of 2.9% (measured with Ki-67), frequent hormone receptor expression (8 of the 10 cases presented hormone-specific receptors), low to moderate vascularization compared with metastases from the two uterine sarcomas, remarkable p53 overexpression and frequent expression of the lymphokine, the galectins and accessible binding sites. The median survival of the BML patients was 94 months after excision of the intrapulmonary lesions, and the maximum survival of the two
sarcoma
patients was 22 months. The results recorded in this patient sample with the methodology applied suggest that benign metastasizing leiomyomas are a slow-growing variant of leiomyosarcoma of the uterus, which becomes clinically apparent at a young age and progresses with low velocity.
...
PMID:Benign metastasizing leiomyoma of the uterus: documentation of clinical, immunohistochemical and lectin-histochemical data of ten cases. 1103 49
A left atrial tumor, in which radical resection was impossible, demonstrated two processes: An inflammatory pseudotumor and cellular atypia suggestive of a
sarcoma
. Immunohistochemistry (proliferating cell nuclear antigen [PCNA], MIB-1 [Ki-67 antibody],
bcl-2
positive; p53 negative, focal loss of nm23) was supportive for a malignant tumor. Despite no further therapy because of uncertainty in tumor classification, the patient remained in remission for 28 months. Thereafter, spine metastases and local regrowth were found, and the patient died 15 months later, after temporary remission by radiotherapy. This case stresses the impact immunohistochemistry may have on diagnosis of malignancy and the difficulty in predicting the biological behavior of cardiac sarcomas.
...
PMID:A primary cardiac sarcoma with unusual histology and clinical course. 1138 22
Solitary fibrous tumors are spindle cell neoplasms frequently arising in the serosal surface as well as a variety of other sites. We report two cases of large solitary fibrous tumor arising in the kidney, clinically thought to be renal cell carcinoma, in 41- and 72-year-old men. Although large in size (13.0 and 14.0 cm in greatest dimension, respectively), both lesions were well circumscribed and composed of a mixture of spindle cells and dense collagenous bands with no areas of necrosis or cystic changes noted macroscopically or microscopically. Immunohistochemical studies revealed reactivity for vimentin, CD34, collagen IV, and
bcl-2
protein in both cases, with no staining for keratin, S-100 protein, or muscle markers, confirming the diagnosis of solitary fibrous tumor of the kidney. Solitary fibrous tumor of the kidney is rare but may present as a large mass that may be clinically confused with carcinoma or
sarcoma
.
...
PMID:Large solitary fibrous tumor of the kidney: report of two cases and review of the literature. 1168 80
Authors present an additional case report of pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor (PHAT), only recently recognized entity amongst the soft tissue tumors. 63-year-old man underwent surgery for subcutaneous tumor growing on the forearm. Grossly, ovoid well demarcated tumor 4.0 x 3.5 x 2.5 cm was removed. Histologically, hypovascular areas of spindle-cells arranged in sheets and fascicles resembling spindle-cell
sarcoma
and areas rich on ectatic vessels with fibrin deposits or thickened hyalinized walls were present. Some cells contained intranuclear cytoplasmatic inclusions, lobulated nuclei with or without prominent nucleoli or multiple nuclei. Mitoses were less than 1 per 30 HPF, Ki-67 nuclear positivity was observed in 2.6% of tumor cells. Immunohistochemically, cells were positive with vimentin, but negative for CD34, S100, desmin, smooth-muscle actin, EMA, VWF, CD99,
bcl-2
and cytokeratins. The patient did well, without recurrent tumor after 13 months follow-up. Spectrum of tumors including solitary fibrous tumor, giant-cell angiofibroma, neurilemmoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma and acral myxoinflammatory tumor with atypical bizarre giant cells is discussed in differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor. 1181 37
The diagnosis of granulocytic
sarcoma
can be very difficult when there is no demonstrable abnormality in the peripheral blood or bone marrow. We present the diagnostic algorithm of granulocytic
sarcoma
by reporting on a case mimicking large cell lymphoma without previous manifestation of acute myeloid leukemia or a myeloproliferative disorder. After standard histoprocessing, we used immunohistochemical and molecular biological methods to analyze our case. The lymph node showed diffuse infiltration of immature blast cells resembling large cell lymphoma. However, immunohistochemistry did not support this diagnosis. The tumor cells showed LCA,
bcl-2
, CD43, CD34 and myeloperoxidase positivity. We also detected
bcl-2
gene rearrangement. In case of a lack of a specific histological picture, particularly in poorly differentiated tumors, only some minor histological signs in combination with immunohistochemistry and molecular diagnostic methods can help to render the correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:Complex pathological diagnosis of granulocytic sarcoma: apropos of a case. 1186 12
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