Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P06126 (CD1a)
2,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

According to the World Health Organization classification, neoplasms with perivascular epithelioid cell differentiation (PEComas) are mesenchymal tumors composed of histologically and immunohistochemically distinctive PEC. Generally, nearly all PEComas have immunoreactivity for both melanocytic (HMB-45 and/or melan A) and smooth muscle (actin (SMA) and/or desmin) markers. Recently the authors reported that benign clear cell sugar tumor of the lung, one of the PEComas, expressed CD1a. Therefore the purpose of the present study was to investigate the relationship between PEComas and CD1a expression. Nineteen PEComas were obtained, which included angiomyolipoma of the kidney or liver, lymphangiomyomatosis of the uterus or lung and clear cell sugar tumor of the lung. Eighteen tumors had alpha-SMA and HMB-45 expression and 16 had melan A expression. In contrast, all 19 tumors had CD1a expression. The present study confirms CD1a expression in many cases of PEComa. These data suggest that CD1a expression can be an additional new marker for PEComas and also supports the distinct and integrated disease entity of PEComas.
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PMID:CD1a expression in PEComas. 1825 80

Uterine epithelioid smooth muscle tumors and uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumors (PEComas) are known to display such a substantial overlap in morphologic and immunophenotypic characteristics that the existence of the latter as a distinct clinicopathologic entity at this location has been called into question. Recent research suggests that the constituent entities of the PEComa family at all anatomical locations, including lymphangioleiomyomatosis of the uterus, uniformly display immunoreactivity for CD1a. The purpose of this study is to determine the proportion of uterine epithelioid smooth muscle tumors that may similarly be CD1a-positive. Representative sections from 18 archived epithelioid smooth muscle tumors of the uterine corpus (6 epithelioid leiomyosarcomas and 12 epithelioid leiomyomas), diagnosed and classified as such based on World Health Organization criteria, were subjected to immunohistochemical stains for CD1a and HMB-45. The epithelioid component of the tissue sections evaluated ranged from 10% to 100% (mean, 70%). Two cases were composed predominantly of cells with overtly clear cytoplasm. All cases were entirely negative for CD1a. Of 18 cases, 1 (5.5%) (an epithelioid leiomyosarcoma) displayed immunoreactivity for HMB-45 in scattered lesional cells that constituted approximately 5% of the overall tumoral volume for the case. All others were HMB-45-negative. Given their rarity, future studies are required to confirm that all PEComas of the uterus are indeed uniformly positive for CD1a. However, if the latter staining pattern is confirmed, our findings herein suggest that CD1a may be a useful immunohistochemical adjunct in distinguishing uterine epithelioid smooth muscle tumors from uterine PEComas.
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PMID:Epithelioid smooth muscle tumors of the uterus do not express CD1a: a potential immunohistochemical adjunct in their distinction from uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumors. 1899 3

Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComas) are a group of ubiquitous neoplasms described in different organs that share distinctive morphologic, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and genetic features. They have been reported in several organs such as the uterus, lung, kidney, liver, small and large bowel, and prostate. To the best of our knowledge, only 8 cervical PEComa cases have been described. We report the case of a 43-yr-old woman who presented with abnormal uterine bleeding. Clinical diagnosis of a malignant cervical lesion followed an excision, histopathologically evaluated as PEComa. The hysterectomy specimen confirmed the diagnosis by strong HMB-45 positivity, weak S100 positivity, and focal, moderate cytoplasmic TTF-1 positivity, and negative melan A, SMA, desmin, vimentin, cytokeratins, CD1a and other markers. The patient was negative for tuberous sclerosis complex, did not receive additional therapy, and 3 yr later is disease free. Cervical PEComas are very rare tumors but have to be considered in the differential diagnosis of cervical lesions exhibiting unusual cytologic and immunohistochemical characteristics.
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PMID:Perivascular Epithelioid Cell Tumor (PEComa) of the Uterine Cervix: A Case Report of a 43-Yr-Old Woman With Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Treated With Hysterectomy. 2878 20