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Query: UNIPROT:P10721 (
c-kit
)
6,575
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The annual incidence of testicular neoplasms has doubled in the last 40 years, with an estimated 7,500 new cases of germ cell tumor each year. The role of immunostaining has increased with the introduction of several novel markers in the last decade. The role of the following markers in differential diagnosis is featured: alpha-fetoprotein,
c-kit
, CD30,
cytokeratin
AE1/3, glypican-3, human chorionic gonadotropin, OCT3/4, NANOG, p63, placental-like alkaline phosphatase, topoisomerase II, and VASA.
...
PMID:New immunohistochemical markers in testicular tumors. 1822 94
To further define the clinicopathologic spectrum of epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma (EMCa), we report the gross, histologic, and immunophenotypic characteristics of 61 tumors seen within a 30-year-period. The mean age at presentation was 60.9 years, with a female predominance (1.5:1). The most common sites were parotid (62.1%), sinonasal mucoserous glands (10.3%), palate (8.6%), and submandibular (8.6%). Most EMCas showed a characteristic nodular/multinodular growth pattern and classic biphasic tubular histology. However, new morphologies in EMCa such as ancient change (8.2%), "Verocay"-like change (3.3%), and sebaceous differentiation (13.1%) were noted. Specific histologic variants were dedifferentiated EMCa (3.3%), oncocytic EMCa (8.2%), EMCa ex pleomorphic adenoma (1.6%), double-clear EMCa (3.3%), and EMCa with myoepithelial anaplasia (3.3%). All
cytokeratin
cocktails selectively highlighted the epithelial component well. Of the myoepithelial markers, p63, smooth muscle actin and vimentin performed best. Bcl-2 and
c-kit
were frequently positive (66.7% and 69.2%, respectively). p53 was highly expressed only in 1 dedifferentiated EMCa. The recurrence rate was 36.3% (median disease-free survival 11.34 y), but death was rare with 5-year and 10-year disease-specific survivals of 93.5% and 81.8%, respectively. The most important univariate predictors of recurrence were margin status (log rank P=0.006), angiolymphatic invasion (P=0.002), tumor necrosis (P=0.004), and myoepithelial anaplasia (P=0.038). Thus, EMCa is generally a low-grade tumor with a broader morphologic spectrum than previously thought, with several key features predictive of recurrence. Immunohistochemistry can aid diagnosis by highlighting the biphasic nature of the tumor.
...
PMID:Epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma: a review of the clinicopathologic spectrum and immunophenotypic characteristics in 61 tumors of the salivary glands and upper aerodigestive tract. 1719 18
Preoperative diagnosis of hepatic angiomyolipoma is difficult, and the treatment for it remains controversial. The aim of this study is to review our experience in the treatment of hepatic angiomyolipoma and to propose a treatment strategy for this disease. We retrospectively collected the clinical, imaging, and pathological features of patients with hepatic angiomyolipoma. Immunohistochemical studies with antibodies for HMB-45, actin, S-100,
cytokeratin
, vimentin, and
c-kit
were performed. Treatment experience and long-term follow-up results are summarized. During a period of 9 years, 10 patients with hepatic angiomyolipoma were treated at our hospital. There was marked female predominance (nine patients). Nine patients received surgical resection without complications. One patient received nonoperative management with biopsy and follow-up. One patient died 11 months after surgery because of recurrent disease. We propose all symptomatic patients should receive surgical resection for hepatic angiomyolipoma. Conservative management with close follow-up is suggested in patients with asymptomatic tumors and meet the following criteria: (1) tumor size smaller than 5 cm, (2) angiomyolipoma proved through fine needle aspiration biopsy, (3) patients with good compliance, and (4) not a hepatitis virus carrier.
...
PMID:Management of hepatic angiomyolipoma. 1743 29
Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) is defined as a very rare mesenchymal tumor of histologically and immuno-histochemically distinctive perivascular epithelioid cells. PEComa in the colon is very rare, with only a few reported cases so far. Because of its rarity, the clinical features and biological behavior of PEComa in the colon have yet to be established. A 16-year-old female patient with PEComa in the transverse colon was referred to our hospital for rectal bleeding. Laboratory data showed a hemoglobin level of 6.6 g/dL, WBC of 8,800/mm(3), and platelet count of 191,000/mm(3). Colonoscopy, barium enema, and abdominal computed tomography revealed a 2-cm, smooth-surfaced, round tumor with focal ulceration in the proximal transverse colon. The patient complained of abdominal pain one day after endoscopic polypectomy. She underwent a segmental resection for a perforated transverse colon. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells showed strong diffuse positivity for HMB-45 while they were negative for
c-kit
, smooth muscle actin,
cytokeratin
, S-100, vimentin, desmin, chromogranin, synaptophysin, EMA, and CD-34. The diagnosis of PEComa was based on histological and immunohistochemical staining. The patient did not receive any adjuvant therapy and was discharged on postoperative day 11 without complications. Whole-body fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose fusion positron emission tomography performed 2 months after surgery showed no signs of recurrence or metastasis. There was also no recurrence or metastasis at 24 months' follow-up.
...
PMID:Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) in the transverse colon of an adolescent: a case report. 1745 82
Nonsmall cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (NSCNEC) of the ovary is a rare and aggressive tumor commonly associated with other surface epithelial and germ cell neoplasms. In this study, we present the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of 11 such cases seen at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in a 16-year period (1990 to 2005). Patients ranged in age from 22 to 63 years (mean 46.7). The most common presentation was abdominal/pelvic pain (6 cases), followed by ascites (2 cases), pelvic mass, vaginal bleeding, and abdominal bloating (1 case each). Tumors were mostly unilateral, cystic, or solid/cystic and ranged in size from 5 to 26 cm (mean 16.2). In 8 cases, NSCNEC was associated with other epithelial neoplasms, including mucinous neoplasms of low malignant potential, mucinous carcinoma, endometrioid carcinoma, mixed endometrioid and mucinous carcinoma, and a high-grade carcinoma, not otherwise specified. In 2 cases, the tumor was associated with a mature cystic teratoma; one of them also containing an invasive moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. A single case was associated with a benign ovarian cyst. The latter case had a dermoid cyst in the contralateral ovary. NSCNEC represented anywhere from 10% to 90% of the ovarian tumor. Microscopically, the neuroendocrine component was usually composed of large and/or intermediate oval to round cells. In 2 cases, the intermediate cells were intermixed with small cells. Three cases had also spindle cells. The neoplastic cells were mostly arranged in a solid pattern, nests, or trabeculae. All tumors had a brisk mitotic activity. Immunoperoxidase studies for keratin cocktail,
cytokeratin
(CK) 7, CK20, CAM 5.2, chromogranin A, synaptophysin, NSE, CD56, and
c-kit
were performed and the cases stained as follows: keratin cocktail 6/6, CK7 4/5, CK20 3/5, CAM 5.2 3/3, chromogranin A 8/11, synaptophysin 9/9, NSE 1/1, CD56 4/8, and
c-kit
5/7. According to the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics staging system, 4 cases were stage I tumors, 3 cases were stage III tumors, and 4 cases were stage IV tumors. Seven patients were treated with total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy followed by chemotherapy. One patient had a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with omentectomy and appendectomy followed by chemotherapy; 1 patient had a total abdominal hysterectomy with right salpingo-oophorectomy followed by chemotherapy; one had a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy followed by chemotherapy, and one had a right salpingo-oophorectomy with appendectomy followed by chemotherapy. Five patients died of disease at 2, 3, 9, 20, and 36 months. One patient is alive with disease at 8 months and 5 are alive without evidence of disease at 11, 28, 37, 66, and 68 months. Four of 5 patients who died of disease had either stage III or IV tumors and 3 of 5 patients who are alive without evidence of disease have stage I tumors. In summary, ovarian NSCNEC is an aggressive tumor with a tendency to present at advanced stage and cause death within a mean of 17 months after diagnosis; however, some patients, particularly those with stage I disease and/or those who have received platinum-based therapy, may have a more favorable prognosis.
...
PMID:Ovarian nonsmall cell neuroendocrine carcinoma: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 11 cases. 1746 Apr 63
The morphologic characteristics and biologic behavior of small liver cancers with hepatic and biliary differentiation, and their histogenesis, remain unclear. In this study, 35 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) smaller than 3 cm in diameter with biliary differentiation were divided into 3 groups, group 1 [
cytokeratin
(CK) 19-negative/mucin-negative], group 2 (CK 19-positive/mucin-negative), and group 3 (CK 19-positive/mucin-positive). Sixty-one HCCs without biliary differentiation were used as controls. We compared the histologic features of these tumors and the postoperative outcomes. Three morphologic features of HCCs with biliary differentiation were respectively observed in 40% (14/35), 60% (21/35), and 42.9% (15/35) as follows: (1) cancer cells with intermediate morphology, (2) prominent inflammatory cell infiltrate, (3) desmoplastic stroma; neural cell adhesion molecule and
c-kit
expression were noted in 25.7%(9/35) and 8.6%(3/35), respectively. Extrahepatic tumor recurrence after surgery occurred in 0% (0/16) of group 1, 33.3% (3/9) of group 2, 40.0% (4/10) of group 3, and 8.2% (5/61) of the ordinary HCCs. The tumor-related survival of group 3 patients was worse than that of patients with ordinary HCCs, but there were no differences between the survival of group 1, or group 2 patients and those with ordinary HCCs. Our results suggest that the biliary differentiation does occur even in small HCC, and a mucin-producing cancer cells indicates aggressive tumor behavior. The combination of intermediate cancer cells, inflammatory cell infiltrate, and desmoplastic stroma is likely to be related to the biliary differentiation of HCC.
...
PMID:Histologic characteristics and prognostic significance in small hepatocellular carcinoma with biliary differentiation: subdivision and comparison with ordinary hepatocellular carcinoma. 1746 Apr 64
The MHB-2 cell line, established from a mouse hepatoblastoma (HB), was subjected to the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for evaluation of gene expression related to cell differentiation. RNAs for
c-kit
, CD34, thy-1, albumin,
cytokeratin
(CK) 8, 18 and 19 could be detected, but expression of alpha-fetoprotein, glucose-6-phosphatase, tyrosine aminotransferase and CK7 was not observed. MHB-2 cells were positive for CK8/18 but negative for
c-kit
, CD34, thy-1 and albumin on protein level. Immunohistochemical staining of the HB in vivo revealed diffusely expressed
c-kit
. Thy-1-positive HB cells were sparsely observed, but the tumor was negative for CD34 and rarely positive for CK8/18. By in situ hybridization, the HB was positive for CK18 but negative for CK19. Slight expression of albumin, but the lack of immature hepatocytic marker suggested some heterogeneous hepatocyte or an undifferentiated cell from other origin. Furthermore, positive expression of CK19 as well as CK8 and CK18 in culture strongly suggested the differentiation into a biliary lineage or the bidirectional state. In conclusion, the present study indicated the mouse HB to have de-differentiated, bipotent, or biliary-like cell characteristics, and considering the histological difference between HB and biliary tumors, it suggests the mouse HB cells are closely like some sort of hepatic undifferentiated cells.
...
PMID:Evaluation of gene expression related to hepatic cell maturation and differentiation in a chemically induced mouse hepatoblastoma cell line. 1763 80
Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is an unusual mesenchymal neoplasm that most often arises in the pleura; however, it has recently been described in a number of extrapleural sites. This report describes an extremely rare case of a benign SFT arising in the pancreas. A 41-year-old woman presented in the clinic with right upper abdominal pain. Subsequent ultrasonographic studies revealed a 1.5x1.5x1.4 cm hypoechoic mass within the pancreatic body, which was later confirmed on both helical computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging studies. An endocrine tumor was clinically suspected. Laparoscopic enucleation of the mass was performed. Microscopically, the tumor was composed of bland uniform spindle cells arranged between collagen bundles. On immunohistochemical studies, these spindle cells were positive for CD34 and bcl-2 but negative for
cytokeratin
(AE1+AE3 and Cam5.2), smooth muscle actin, desmin, S-100, and
c-kit
. Based on the light microscopic morphology and immunohistochemical staining profile, the diagnosis of SFT was rendered.
...
PMID:Solitary fibrous tumor of the pancreas: a case report. 1765 47
Basal breast carcinomas triple negative for estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors and Her2/neu breast carcinomas are more aggressive than conventional neoplasms. We studied 64 cases with immunohistochemistry, using 23 antibodies, to characterize diverse pathological pathways. A basal
cytokeratin
was identified in 81% of tumors and vimentin was identified in 55%. The mean Ki67 index was 46% (range, 10-90%). Coincident expression of p50 and p65, which suggests an active nuclear factor-kappaB factor, was present in 13% of neoplasms. Epithelial growth factor receptor (EGFR), insulin-like growth factor-I receptor (IGF-IR) or
c-kit
(CD117) was identified in 77% of tumors. Loss of protein tyrosine phosphatase was found in 14%, whereas Akt activation was present in 28%. Several differences were identified between two subtypes of basal breast carcinomas: the pure variant (negative S-100 and actin) was more frequently associated with 'in situ carcinoma' (P=0.019) and pBad overexpression (P=0.098), whereas the myoepithelial variant (positive S-100 or actin) showed more frequent tumor necrosis (P=0.048), vimentin expression (P=0.0001), CD117 expression (P=0.001) and activated caspase-3 (P=0.089). IGF-IR could be as important as EGFR for the growth of these neoplasms. Basal cell carcinoma has at least two subtypes with distinct microscopic and immunohistochemical features.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical heterogeneity of breast carcinomas negative for estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors and Her2/neu (basal-like breast carcinomas). 1865 95
Accurate diagnosis of mediastinal seminoma is critical because of its favorable response to radiation therapy and/or cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Immunohistochemical staining for OCT4 has recently been validated as a powerful tool for detecting gonadal seminoma. However, discrepancies between the genetic alterations and immunoprofiles of mediastinal and testicular seminomas have been reported, raising the question of whether techniques that are useful in the diagnosis of gonadal seminoma are applicable to its mediastinal counterpart. The present study was conducted to evaluate the morphologic and immunohistochemical characteristics and chromosomal abnormalities of 12p in 23 primary mediastinal seminomas and to compare their applicability as diagnostic tools. Dual-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analyses for chromosome 12p and immunostains for OCT4,
c-kit
, placental-like alkaline phosphatase, CD30, and a panel of cytokeratins, including
cytokeratin
AE1/AE3 (AE1/3), high molecular weight
cytokeratin
(34betaE12, HMWCK), CAM5.2, cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), and epithelial membrane antigen were performed. Lymphocytic infiltration was found in all 23 cases (100%). The incidence of other histologic characteristics were as follows: fibrous septa/stroma (21 cases, 91%), prominent tumor cell nucleoli (21 cases, 91%), clear tumor cell cytoplasm (20 cases, 87%), distinct tumor cell borders (20 cases, 87%), granulomatous inflammation (17 cases, 74%), cellular pleomorphism (10 cases, 43%), necrosis (8 cases, 35%), prominent cystic change (2 cases, 8%), intercellular edema (1 case, 4%), and syncytiotrophoblasts (1 case, 4%). The mean mitotic count was 4.4 (range 0 to 16) per 10 high-power fields. Moderate to strong nuclear OCT4 staining was identified in all 23 cases (100%). Seventeen tumors (74%) showed membranous expression of
c-kit
, with variable staining intensity and percentages. Weakly to moderately intense immunostaining for placental-like alkaline phosphatase was identified in 10 cases (43%) with occasional background staining artifact. The incidences of positive staining were 43% for AE1/3, 39% for HMWCK, 48% for CAM5.2, 39% for CK7, and 9% for epithelial membrane antigen, respectively. In most cases, these epithelial markers highlighted only a small proportion of tumor cells with variable intensities. Immunostaining for CD30 and CK20 was completely negative in all seminomas. Twenty-two seminomas (96%) revealed chromosome 12p abnormalities, including 12p amplification in 20 cases (87%) or i(12p) in 15 cases (65%). Lymphocytic infiltration is the most common histologic feature observed in primary mediastinal seminoma and both OCT4 immunostain and FISH for 12p abnormalities can be very helpful in diagnosing mediastinal seminoma. The intense staining pattern of OCT4 and the high sensitivity of FISH make them superior to other auxiliary diagnostic utilities for detecting seminoma. In addition, the incidences of
cytokeratin
expression of primary mediastinal seminoma are similar to those of its gonadal counterpart and pathologists must exercise caution in the interpretation of epithelial markers in mediastinal neoplasms.
...
PMID:Primary mediastinal seminoma: a comprehensive assessment integrated with histology, immunohistochemistry, and fluorescence in situ hybridization for chromosome 12p abnormalities in 23 cases. 1816 82
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