65 research outputs found
Sixth Cranial Nerve Palsy and Craniocervical Junction Instability due to Metastatic Urothelial Bladder Carcinoma
Metastases involving the clivus and craniocervical junction (CCJ) are extremely rare. Skull base involvement can result in cranial nerve palsies, while an extensive CCJ involvement can lead to spinal instability. We describe an unusual case of clival and CCJ metastases presenting with VI cranial nerve palsy and neck pain secondary to CCJ instability from metastatic bladder urothelial carcinoma. The patient was first treated with an endoscopic endonasal approach to the clivus for decompression of the VI cranial nerve and then with occipitocervical fixation and fusion to treat CCJ instability. At the 6-month follow-up, the patient experienced complete recovery of VI cranial nerve palsy. To the best of our knowledge, the simultaneous involvement of the clivus and the CCJ due to metastatic bladder carcinoma has never been reported in the literature. Another peculiarity of this case was the presence of both VI cranial nerve deficit and spinal instability. For this reason, the choice of treatment and timing were challenging. In fact, in case of no neurological deficit and spinal stability, palliative chemo- and radiotherapy are usually indicated. In our patient, the presence of progressive diplopia due to VI cranial nerve palsy required an emergent surgical decompression. In this scenario, the extended endoscopic endonasal approach was chosen as a minimally invasive approach to decompress the VI cranial nerve. Posterior occipitocervical stabilization is highly effective in avoiding patient’s neck pain and spinal instability, representing the approach of choice
Studio quantitativo degli eventi biologici della progressione tumorale
Dottorato di ricerca in patologia diagnostica quantitativa. 5. ciclo. A.a. 1992-93. Coordinatore P. TosiConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche - Biblioteca Centrale - P.le Aldo Moro, 7, Rome; Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale - P.za Cavalleggeri, 1, Florence / CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle RichercheSIGLEITItal
Expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen in ameloblastoma and odontogenic cysts.
The identification of the proliferative activity in tumours may be useful to predict the biological behaviour of different lesions. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) has been used for the evaluation of the proliferative ability of many lesions. In this study 22 ameloblastomas (4 follicular, 5 plexiform, 4 acanthomatous, 5 unicystic, 4 recurrent), 12 odontogenic keratocysts (OKC), 8 dentigerous cysts (DC), and 12 radicular cysts (RC) were analysed. PCNA+ cells were present in all cyst types but the OKC contained the highest number of PCNA+ cells. In OKC the location of PCNA+ cells was mainly suprabasal. In ameloblastoma PCNA+ cells were located mainly in the peripheral portion of the tumour islands. Statistical analysis showed that ameloblastoma had higher PCNA+ cell counts than OKC (P < 0.0001); OKC had higher values than DC and RC (P < 0.0001). Recurrent ameloblastoma presented higher PCNA+ cell counts than other types of ameloblastoma, while unicystic ameloblastoma showed lower values than acanthomatous, plexiform and follicular ameloblastomas (in this latter case the difference was not statistically significant). These data could help to explain the different biological behaviour of these lesions
HER-2 status discrepancy between primary breast cancer and metastatic sites. Impact on target therapy.
In this prospective study, we determined HER-2 status in primary
breast invasive carcinomas and in the paired lymph node metastases
(synchronous and metachronous), local recurrence and metachronous
distant metastases, to verify the percentage of discordant
cases. HercepTestTM and Fluorescence in situ hybridization
(FISH) were used to determine HER-2 status on 119 cases of primary
infiltrating breast carcinoma and paired metastases (45
cases with synchronous lymph node metastases, 9 cases with metachronous
lymph node metastases, 30 cases with local recurrence,
and 35 cases with metachronous distant metastases). A therapeutically
significant HER-2 status discordance was demonstrated
between primary carcinoma and synchronous lymph node metastases
(6.7%), local recurrence (13.3%) and metachronous distant
metastases (28.6%). In the first comparison, there was a normal
HER-2 status in primary tumours and HER-2 amplification in
paired metastases, in the second the opposite phenomenon was
present, and both types of discordance were evident in the third
comparison. Considering the cases of local recurrences and metachronous
distant metastases all together, 14 out of 65 cases
(21.5%) showed a therapeutically significant discordance of HER-
2 status between the primary tumour and the paired metachronous
recurrence or metastasis (p < 0.001), the 15.4% of cases
showing normal HER-2 status in the primary tumour and HER-2
amplification in the neoplastic relapse. For the treatment of metastatic
patients, the evaluation of HER-2 status should be performed
in neoplastic tissue from metastatic site, whenever possible.
This procedure could be also suggested in the patients that are
metastatic at the time of diagnosis
Evolutionary somatic cell changes in cervical tumour progression quantitatively evaluated with morphological, histochemical and kinetic parameters.
The somatic cell changes which characterise malignancy evolution in human cervical preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions have been assessed on histological sections by means of a computerised image analyser. Many features have been simultaneously measured on each cell of the lesions studied, and the following results have been obtained: Some features, mainly kinetic, show continuously increasing values which express changes correlated to the increasing malignancy; other features, especially related to nuclear atypia, cellular heterogeneity and the degree of aneuploidy, have values dropping at the level of early stromal infiltration, which can be morphometrically characterised as composed of relatively homogeneous phenotypes; these features seem to express the degree of genetic instability and relate to the evolutionary somatic cell changes; tumour progression evolves through sequential discontinuous steps, each of them characterised by specific phenotypical features of the neoplastic cell population; the neoplastic cells in the foci of early stromal infiltration and vascular invasion, phenotypically more homogeneous than the parent cell populations of carcinoma in situ and infiltrating carcinoma, seem to possess a greater genetic stability
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