47 research outputs found

    Adrenal incidentaloma: a case of carcinoma

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    Adrenal incidentaloma (AI) is a term applied to an accidentally discovered adrenal mass on imaging performed for reasons unrelated to adrenal pathology. The widespread application of abdominal imaging procedure has resulted in an increased frequency of clinically silent adrenal masses. Although most AIs are nonfunctioning benign adenomas, a multidisciplinary approach with biochemical and radiological evaluation is needed to characterize these lesions and identify patients who are at high risk for hormonal or malignant evolution. Herein, we describe a case of a 69-year-old man with a pain at the base of right chest. On the basis of clinical evaluation, biochemical analysis, as well as imaging procedures, a diagnosis of right adrenocortical carcinoma was made. The patient underwent medical treatment

    Translationally controlled tumor protein in prostatic adenocarcinoma: correlation with tumor grading and treatment-related changes

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    12Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related death. The androgen deprivation therapy is the standard treatment for advanced stages. Unfortunately, virtually all tumors become resistant to androgen withdrawal. The progression to castration-resistance is not fully understood, although a recent paper has suggested translationally controlled tumor protein to be implicated in the process. The present study was designed to investigate the role of this protein in prostate cancer, focusing on the correlation between its expression level with tumor differentiation and response to treatment. We retrieved 292 prostatic cancer specimens; of these 153 had been treated only by radical prostatectomy and 139 had undergone radical prostatectomy after neoadjuvant treatment with combined androgen blockade therapy. Non-neoplastic controls were represented by 102 prostatic peripheral zone specimens. In untreated patients, the expression of the protein, evaluated by RT-qPCR and immunohistochemistry, was significantly higher in tumor specimens than in non-neoplastic control, increasing as Gleason pattern and score progressed. In treated prostates, the staining was correlated with the response to treatment. An association between protein expression and the main clinicopathological factors involved in prostate cancer aggressiveness was identified. These findings suggest that the protein may be a promising prognostic factor and a target for therapy.openopenRocca, Bruno Jim; Ginori, Alessandro; Barone, Aurora; Calandra, Calogera; Crivelli, Filippo; De Falco, Giulia; Gazaneo, Sara; Tripodi, Sergio; Cevenini, Gabriele; Del Vecchio, Maria Teresa; Ambrosio, Maria Raffaella; Tosi, PieroRocca, BRUNO JIM; Ginori, Alessandro; Barone, Aurora; Calandra, Calogera; Crivelli, Filippo; DE FALCO, Giulia; Gazaneo, Sara; Tripodi, Sergio; Cevenini, Gabriele; DEL VECCHIO, MARIA TERESA; Ambrosio, MARIA RAFFAELLA; Tosi, Pier

    Putative role of circulating human papillomavirus DNA in the development of primary squamous cell carcinoma of the middle rectum: a case report

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    Here we present the case of a patient affected by rectal squamous cell carcinoma in which we demonstrated the presence of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) by a variety of techniques. Collectively, the virus was detected not only in the tumor but also in some regional lymph nodes and in non-neoplastic mucosa of the upper tract of large bowel. By contrast, it was not identifiable in its common sites of entry, namely oral and ano-genital region. We also found HPV DNA in the plasma-derived exosome. Next, by in vitro studies, we confirmed the capability of HPV DNA-positive exosomes, isolated from the supernatant of a HPV DNA positive cell line (CaSki), to transfer its DNA to human colon cancer and normal cell lines. In the stroma nearby the tumor mass we were able to demonstrate the presence of virus DNA in the stromal compartment, supporting its potential to be transferred from epithelial cells to the stromal ones. Thus, this case report favors the notion that human papillomavirus DNA can be vehiculated by exosomes in the blood of neoplastic patients and that it can be transferred, at least in vitro, to normal and neoplastic cells. Furthermore, we showed the presence of viral DNA and RNA in pluripotent stem cells of non-tumor tissue, suggesting that after viral integration (as demonstrated by p16 and RNA in situ hybridization positivity), stem cells might have been activated into cancer stem cells inducing neoplastic transformation of normal tissue through the inactivation of p53, p21, and Rb. It is conceivable that the virus has elicited its oncogenic effect in this specific site and not elsewhere, despite its wide anatomical distribution in the patient, for a local condition of immune suppression, as demonstrated by the increase of T-regulatory (CD4/CD25/FOXP3 positive) and T-exhausted (CD8/PD-1positive) lymphocytes and the M2 polarization (high CD163/CD68 ratio) of macrophages in the neoplastic microenvironment. It is noteworthy that our findings depicted a static picture of a long-lasting dynamic process that might evolve in the development of tumors in other anatomical sites. Copyright © 2019 Ambrosio, Vernillo, De Carolis, Carducci, Mundo, Ginori, Rocca, Nardone, Lucenti Fei, Carfagno, Lazzi, Cricca and Tosi

    Underlying Event measurements in pp collisions at s=0.9 \sqrt {s} = 0.9 and 7 TeV with the ALICE experiment at the LHC

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    Detection of BRAFV600E mutation on papillary thyroid carcinoma and metastatic malignant melanoma by fine-needle aspiration cytology: How genetic testing may drive toward personalized medicine

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    A genetic link between cutaneous melanoma and thyroid cancer (TC) has been identified. A high percentage of both melanomas and papillary carcinomas of the thyroid harbors a recurrent mutation (i.e., BRAFV600E) in the BRAF oncogene. Herein, we report the case of a 65-year-old man with papillary TC and cutaneous malignant melanoma metastatic to masseter muscle, both characterized by BRAF mutation. This is one of the rare reports in which a complete molecular characterization has been performed. As the patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma have a higher risk of malignant melanoma and vice versa, continuous monitoring of such patients, with either of these tumors is necessary. Fineneedle aspiration cytology is useful as shown in the present case

    Pelvic urothelial carcinoma with nested pattern of growth and an uncommon clinical presentation: a case report

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    Nested variant of urothelial carcinoma (NVUC) is a rare and often unrecognized urothelial neoplasia. Diagnosis is based on morphology only, and no immunohistochemical or cytogenetic differences from usual high-grade urothelial carcinomas have been reported

    Myeloid sarcoma and adenocarcinoma of the large bowel as collision tumors: a case report

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    Myeloid sarcoma is a rare tumor composed of myeloid cells, localized in an extramedullary site, which may be associated with a concurrent myeloid neoplasm involving the bone marrow, although such an association is not required. Most patients present with acute myeloid leukemia and their prognosis is poor. We describe the case of a 76-year old woman with an adenocarcinoma of the right colon infiltrating the subserosa synchronous with a myeloid sarcoma at the same site; one pericolic lymph node was infiltrated by both tumors. The peculiarities of this case are the clinical presentation (as an acute abdomen due to subserosa infiltration by the myeloid sarcoma), the coexistence of a myeloid sarcoma with an adenocarcinoma of the right colon, and the absence of progression to acute leukemia. Coexistence of myeloid sarcoma and adenocarcinoma in the colon is probably incidental, and so it appears likely that the two different tumours arose from different mechanisms. However, a possible common background is conceivable. Some authors have found that p53 has a pivotal role in driving the maturation of myeloid stem cells and p53 is, also, involved in colon carcinogenesis. In our case, it may be hypothesized that synchronous heterogeneous mutations occurred in different types of committed cells or in stem cells secondary to p53 loss. Since only one case report has evaluated the correlation between myeloid sarcoma and adenocarcinoma of the large bowel, further immunohistochemical and molecular studies are needed to clarify the pathogenetic relationship between the
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