Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:O76050 (neu)
3,969 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Extramammary Paget's disease (EMPD) is considered to be an intraepithelial adenocarcinoma. Typically involved anatomical sites are the vulvar, perianal, perineal, scrotal and penile regions. Clinically, the lesions present as well-defined, moist, erythematous plaques usually accompanied by pruritus. An unusual feature of EMPD is its association with cutaneous, adnexal-structure adenocarcinomas and its association with internal malignancies. Histopathological examination shows epidermal acanthosis and elongated rete ridges. Paget's cells are large intraepidermal cells with a large nucleous and abundant pale cytoplasm. Recent studies of perianal and vulvar EMPD have described distinct immunohistochemical subtypes termed cutaneous and endodermal. Cutaneous EMPD is characteristically positive for cytokeratin (CK)7, negative for CK20, and positive for gross cystic disease fluid protein (GCDFP)15+, whereas endodermal EMPD shows a CK7+ CK20+ GCDFP15- phenotype. Surgery remains the treatment of choice, with either wide surgical excision or Mohs' micrographic surgery. We present a case of EMPD with an underlying carcinoma, which combined immunohistochemical findings suggestive of the cutaneous subtype (positive for CK7, GCDFP15, mucin (MUC)1, human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER)2/neu positive) and the endodermal subtype, frequently associated with internal malignancy (CK20, MUC2, CDX-2 positve); however, our patient had no associated internal malignancy.
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PMID:Extramammary Paget's disease of the groin with underlying carcinoma and fatal outcome. 1848 20

Mammary Paget's disease is rare and comprises about 0.62% of all breast cancer cases, only 1.65% of which occur in male patients. This case report involves a 76-year-old man who presented to his primary care physician with an itching, scaly, unilateral lesion involving the nipple skin. He underwent wide local excision of the lesion for a diagnosis of Bowen's disease (squamous cell carcinoma in situ). Histologic examination of the specimen revealed mammary Paget's disease with ductal carcinoma in situ in the underlying breast tissue. A panel of immunohistochemical stains revealed the Paget cells to be positive for cytokeratin 7, MUC1, GATA3, and androgen receptor and negative for cytokeratins 5/6, p63, SOX10, and MART-1/Melan-A. Paget cells were also negative for estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor, and positive for HER2/neu. However, the underlying ductal carcinoma in situ was positive for both estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor and negative for HER2/neu. This discordance, supported by the current literature, suggests an alternative etiology for Paget's disease in certain cases that cannot be explained by the well-established epidermotropic and transformative theories of Paget's disease evolution.
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PMID:Mammary Paget's Disease of the Male Breast: A Rare Case With an Unusual Immunohistochemical Profile. 3151 89