7 research outputs found

    Disseminating Adamantinoma of the Tibia

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    Patient. This report describes a patient with a primary long bone adamantinoma. The lesion was initially wrongly diagnosed as fibrous dysplasia and the patient was treated by curettage. At second local recurrence, the tumour had progressed from an osteofibrous dysplasia-like to a full-blown classic adamantinoma, with metastatic potential to the lungs 19 years after the initial treatment. Lung metastasectomy by sternotomy was carried out twice in a period of over 312 years. The patient is currently alive without evidence of other metastatic disease

    Exploring Morphologic and Molecular Aspects of Endometrial Cancer under Progesterone Treatment in the Context of Fertility Preservation

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    Objective The standard treatment of early-stage (FIGO [International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics] I) endometrioid endometrial cancer (EEC) is hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. An alternative approach for younger women with low-grade EEC who wish to preserve fertility may be hormonal treatment. Previous studies have suggested that progesterone may elicit its antitumor effect in EEC by interacting with the Wingless (Wnt) and/or phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathways. Therefore, we explored whether common activating genetic alterations in Wnt and PI3K/Akt signaling correlated with nonresponsiveness to progesterone therapy for low-grade EEC. In addition, we investigated whether benign morphology under progesterone treatment is accompanied by the absence of genetic changes. Methods We analyzed molecular alterations in the Wnt and PI3K/Akt signaling in 84 serial endometrial samples from 11 premenopausal patients with progesterone receptor-positive low-grade EEC conservatively treated with progesterone and correlated these with histological and clinical follow-up. Results There were 6 responders and 5 nonresponders to progesterone treatment. The response rate to progesterone treatment was 55%, and the relapse rate was 83%. All responders had alterations in both the Wnt and PI3K/Akt pathway before treatment. In the nonresponder group, tumors inconsistently showed alterations in none, 1, or both pathways. Normalization of the endometrium morphology under progesterone treatment is accompanied by the absence of the genetic changes found in the specimen before treatment. Conclusions We found that activating molecular alterations in either Wnt or PI3K/Akt signaling pathways did not predict resistance to progesterone treatment. It seems that morphological response goes along with disappearance of the established mutations. This exploratory study suggests that Wnt or PI3K/Akt status is unable to predict response to progesterone treatment in patients with EEC

    Mutations in the heparan sulfate backbone elongating enzymes EXT1 and EXT2 have no major effect on endothelial glycocalyx and the glomerular filtration barrier

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    In this study, the effect of heterozygous germline mutations in the heparan sulfate (HS) glycosaminoglycan chain co-polymerases EXT1 and EXT2 on glomerular barrier function and the endothelial glycocalyx in humans is investigated. Heparan sulfate (HS) glycosaminoglycans are deemed essential to the glomerular filtration barrier, including the glomerular endothelial glycocalyx. Animal studies have shown that loss of HS results in a thinner glycocalyx. Also, decreased glomerular HS expression is observed in various proteinuric renal diseases in humans. A case report of a patient with an EXT1 mutation indicated that this could result in a specific renal phenotype. This patient suffered from multiple osteochondromas, an autosomal dominant disease caused by mono-allelic germline mutations in the EXT1 or EXT2 gene. These studies imply that HS is indeed essential to the glomerular filtration barrier. However, loss of HS did not lead to proteinuria in various animal models. We demonstrate that multiple osteochondroma patients do not have more microalbuminuria or altered glycocalyx properties compared to age-matched controls (n = 19). A search for all Dutch patients registered with both osteochondroma and kidney biopsy (n = 39) showed that an EXT1 or EXT2 mutation does not necessarily lead to specific glomerular morphological phenotypic changes. In conclusion, this study shows that a heterozygous mutation in the HS backbone elongating enzymes EXT1 and EXT2 in humans does not result in (micro)albuminuria, a specific renal phenotype or changes to the endothelial glycocalyx, adding to the growing knowledge on the role of EXT1 and EXT2 genes in pathophysiology
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