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)

We report the clinical, morphologic, immunophenotypic, and ploidy findings of seven cases of serous borderline tumor of the paratestis. Mean patient age was 56 years (range, 14-77 years), and the clinical presentation was that of a testicular mass. Tumors ranged in size from 1 to 6 cm (mean, 3.5 cm). Six tumors arose from the tunica albuginea, and two of these tumors were intratesticular. One tumor arose from the tunica vaginalis. Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis is histologically identical to its ovarian counterpart. The tumors were cystic with numerous intracystic blunt papillae lined by stratified epithelial cells with minimal to mild cytologic atypia. Psammoma bodies were present in two cases. In all cases, the neoplastic cells stained strongly and diffusely for cytokeratin 7, estrogen receptor, and CD15, and six of seven cases were positive for progesterone receptor and MOC-31. The cells did not stain for cytokeratin 20, carcinoembryonic antigen, calretinin, and HER2/neu. Proliferative activity, as assessed by MIB-1 staining, ranged from 1.3% to 10% (mean, 5.5%). Five of six tumors were diploid, and one was tetraploid. Patients were treated by radical orchiectomy and followed up from 4 months to 18 years (mean, 48 months; median, 8.5 months). No recurrences or metastases occurred. Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis is morphologically and immunophenotypically identical to ovarian serous borderline tumor. To date, no serous borderline tumor of the paratestis reported in the literature or in our series has recurred or metastasized after resection.
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PMID:Serous borderline tumor of the paratestis: a report of seven cases. 1122 8

Desmoplastic small round cell tumor is a rare tumor typically involving peritoneum. Although the histogenesis of desmoplastic small round cell tumor has yet to be elucidated, immunophenotypical and morphological analysis shows a characteristic divergent phenotype overlapping with other round cell tumors such as Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma, small cell mesothelioma, and carcinoma. Detection of the EWS-WT1 gene fusion is characteristic of desmoplastic small round cell tumor and has been used reliably in tumor diagnosis. In this study, we evaluated the immunophenotype of 23 desmoplastic small round cell tumor cases with the EWS-WT1 gene fusion product identified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Paraffin sections were stained with antibodies against calretinin, WT1 (C19), desmin, myoglobin, MyoD, Myf5, myogenin, placental alkaline phosphatase, cytokeratins, MIC2, HER2/neu and c-kit using standard immunohistochemical methods. Immunoreactivity was evaluated semiquantitively by light microscopy. Desmoplastic small round cell tumors showed reactivity with calretinin in 4/21, desmin in 21/23, myoglobin in 5/17, placental alkaline phosphatase in 17/21, HER2/neu in 7/18 (3+ in 1 and 1+ in 6), c-kit in 2/14, MIC2 in 13/23, WT1 in 16/23, CAM5.2 in 21/23, and AE1/3 in 16/23 cases. The most sensitive myogenic and epithelial markers are desmin and CAM 5.2. Although nuclear reactivity of the early myogenic regulatory factors (MyoD, myogenin, Myf5) was not detected, myoglobin immunoreactivity was present in 29% of desmoplastic small round cell tumors. HER2/neu overexpression (3+) and c-kit expression are uncommon in desmoplastic small round cell tumors. A panel of myogenic and epithelial markers should be used to detect the divergent phenotype in desmoplastic small round cell tumors, a key feature in the differential diagnosis. Detection of EWS-WT1 fusion becomes critical for the diagnosis when the characteristic divergent phenotype cannot be detected immunohistochemically.
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PMID:Immunophenotype of desmoplastic small round cell tumors as detected in cases with EWS-WT1 gene fusion product. 1264 Jan 3

This report describes the clinicopathologic features of a primary lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma of the endometrium, representing only the fourth reported case of this tumor at this location. In addition to its classic morphologic features, focal clear cells were also identified within the tumor, thereby expanding the morphologic spectrum of the neoplasm at this location. A comprehensive immunohistochemical characterization of the tumor was performed, as was microsatellite instability testing. The tumor was diagnosed in a 79-year-old woman and was surgically/pathologically staged as IB by the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) criteria. The tumor displayed typical morphologic features (tumor cells with a syncytial appearance in an inflammatory background) with the exception of the aforementioned polygonal cells with well-defined cell membranes and cytoplasmic clarity in <1% of the tumor. The epithelial component showed strong and diffuse immunoreactivity for CAM 5.2, p53, p16, E-cadherin, cytokeratin (CK) 7, vimentin, CKAE1/3, and epithelial membrane antigen. The MIB-1 proliferative index in these regions was about 70%. Approximately 10% to 30% of lesional cells showed strong immunoreactivity for CK903, S100, MOC31, CD138, but the pattern of positivity was patchy and discontinuous. The epithelial cells were entirely negative for CK5/6, smooth muscle actin, p504S, CK20, synaptophysin, chromogranin, CD56, CD99, WT-1, thyroid transcription factor-1, p63, CD117 (c-kit), CD34, calretinin, desmin, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, FLI-1, ALK-1, D2-40, cytomegalovirus antigen, Epstein-Barr virus-encoded RNA-1, Epstein-Barr virus, monoclonal carcinoembryonic antigen, and HER2/neu. The foci with clear cells were not immunophenotypically distinct from the non-clear cell areas and had an approximately similar proliferative index. The inflammatory component was mixed (lymphocytes, histiocytes, plasma cells, neutrophils) but was composed predominantly of CD45/CD3/CD8 T lymphocytes, with a CD3 to CD20 ratio of approximately 10:1 and CD8 to CD4 T-cell ratio of approximately 3:1. Numerous (>100 positive cells per 10 high-power fields) S100-positive tumor-infiltrating Langerhans cells were present. The tumor DNA did not exhibit microsatellite instability at any of the loci analyzed. In summary, the limited data available suggest that lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma is a distinct histotype of endometrial carcinoma that is typically seen in postmenopausal women, seems to be unrelated to the Epstein-Barr virus, and has an uncertain prognosis. Differential diagnostic and pathogenetic considerations are discussed within the context of the lesional morphologic and immunophenotypic profile as described herein and in previously reported cases.
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PMID:Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma of the endometrium: immunophenotypic characterization of a rare tumor with microsatellite instability testing. 2430 May 38