9 research outputs found

    Erratum to: 36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

    Get PDF
    [This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1208-6.]

    Sarcomatoid carcinomas of the gallbladder: clinicopathologic characteristics

    No full text
    Sarcomatoid carcinomas recently came into the spotlight through genetic profiling studies and also as a distinct model of epithelial-mesenchymal transition. The literature on sarcomatoid carcinomas of gallbladder is limited. In this study, 656 gallbladder carcinomas (GBC) were reviewed. Eleven (1.7%) with a sarcomatoid component were identified and analyzed in comparison with ordinary GBC (O-GBC). Patients included 9 females and 2 males (F/M = 4.5 vs. 3.9) with a mean age-at-diagnosis of 71 (vs. 64). The median tumor size was 4.6 cm (vs. 2.5; P = 0.01). Nine patients (84%) presented with advanced stage (pT3/4) tumor (vs. 48%). An adenocarcinoma component constituting 1-75% of the tumor was present in nine, and eight had surface dysplasia/CIS; either in situ or invasive carcinoma was present in all cases. An intracholecystic papillary-tubular neoplasm was identified in one. Seven showed pleomorphic-sarcomatoid pattern, and four showed subtle/bland elongated spindle cells. Three had an angiosarcomatoid pattern. Two had heterologous elements. One showed few osteoclast-like giant cells, only adjacent to osteoid. Immunohistochemically, vimentin, was positive in six of six; P53 expression was >60% in six of six, keratins in six of seven, and p63 in two of six. Actin, desmin, and S100 were negative. The median Ki67 index was 40%. In the follow-up, one died peri-operatively, eight died of disease within 3 to 8 months (vs. 26 months median survival for O-GBC), and two were alive at 9 and 15 months. The behavior overall was worse than ordinary adenocarcinomas in general but was not different when grade and stage were matched. In summary, sarcomatoid component is identified in < 2% of GBC. Unlike sarcomatoid carcinomas in the remainder of pancreatobiliary tract, these are seldom of the "osteoclastic" type and patients present with large/advanced stage tumors. Limited data suggests that these tumors are aggressive with rapid mortality unlike pancreatic osteoclastic ones which often have indolent behavior

    Frequency and clinicopathologic associations of DNA mismatch repair protein deficiency in ampullary carcinoma: Routine testing is indicated

    No full text
    Background The significance of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency in ampullary cancers (ACs) has not been established. Methods In total, 127 ACs with invasive carcinomas measuring >= 3 mmthat had adequate tissue were analyzed immunohistochemically. Results MMR loss was detected in 18% of ACs (higher than in colorectal cancers). Twelve tumors with MLH1-PMS2 loss were negative forBRAF V600Emutation, suggesting a Lynch syndrome association. MMR-deficient tumors (n = 23), comparedwith MMR-intact tumors (n = 104), showed a striking male predominance (male:female ratio, 4.7). Although the deficient tumors had slightly larger invasion size (2.7 vs 2.1 cm), they also had more expansile growth and less invasiveness, including less perineural invasion, and they ultimately had lower tumor (T) classification and less lymph node metastasis (30% vs 53%;P = .04). More important, patients who had MMR-deficient tumors had better clinical outcomes, with a 5-year overall survival rate of 68% versus 45% (P = .03), which was even more pronounced in those who had higher Tclassification (5-year overall survival, 69% vs 34%;P = .04). MMR deficiencyhad a statistically significant association with medullary phenotype, pushing-border invasion, and tumor-infiltrating immune cells, and it occurred more frequently in ampullary-duodenal type tumors. Programed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) levels analyzed in the 22 MMR-deficient ACs revealed that all medullary carcinomas were positive. Nonmedullary MMR-deficient carcinomas expressed PD-L1 in 33% of tumors cells according to the criteria for a combined positive score >= 1, but all were negative according to the tumor proportion score >= 1 method. Conclusions In ACs, MMR deficiency is even more frequent (18%) than in colon cancer and often has a Lynch-suggestive profile, thus routine testing is warranted. Male gender, pushing-border infiltration, ampullary-duodenal origin, medullary histology, and tumor-related inflammation have a significantly higher association with MMR deficiency. MMR-deficient tumors have less aggressive behavior. PD-L1 expression is common in medullary-phenotype ACs, thus immunotherapy should be considered at least for this group

    Gallbladder polyps: Correlation of size and clinicopathologic characteristics based on updated definitions.

    Get PDF
    BackgroundDifferent perspectives exist regarding the clinicopathologic characteristics, biology and management of gallbladder polyps. Size is often used as the surrogate evidence of polyp behavior and size of ≥1cm is widely used as cholecystectomy indication. Most studies on this issue are based on the pathologic correlation of polyps clinically selected for resection, whereas, the data regarding the nature of polypoid lesions from pathology perspective -regardless of the cholecystectomy indication- is highly limited.MethodsIn this study, 4231 gallbladders -606 of which had gallbladder carcinoma- were reviewed carefully pathologically by the authors for polyps (defined as ≥2 mm). Separately, the cases that were diagnosed as "gallbladder polyps" in the surgical pathology databases were retrieved.Results643 polyps identified accordingly were re-evaluated histopathologically. Mean age of all patients was 55 years (range: 20-94); mean polyp size was 9 mm. Among these 643 polyps, 223 (34.6%) were neoplastic: I. Non-neoplastic polyps (n = 420; 65.4%) were smaller (mean: 4.1 mm), occurred in younger patients (mean: 52 years). This group consisted of fibromyoglandular polyps (n = 196) per the updated classification, cholesterol polyps (n = 166), polypoid pyloric gland metaplasia (n = 41) and inflammatory polyps (n = 17). II. Neoplastic polyps were larger (mean: 21 mm), detected in older patients (mean: 61 years) and consisted of intra-cholecystic neoplasms (WHO's "adenomas" and "intracholecystic papillary neoplasms", ≥1 cm; n = 120), their "incipient" version (ConclusionsApproximately a third of polypoid lesions in the cholecystectomies (regardless of the indication) prove to be neoplastic. The vast majority of (90%) of polyps ≥1 cm and virtually all of those ≥2 cm are neoplastic confirming the current impression that polyps ≥1 cm ought to be removed. However, this study also illustrates that 30% of the neoplastic polyps are <1 cm and therefore small polyps should also be closely watched, especially in older patients

    Frequency and clinicopathologic associations of DNA mismatch repair protein deficiency in ampullary carcinoma: Routine testing is indicated

    No full text
    Background The significance of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency in ampullary cancers (ACs) has not been established. Methods In total, 127 ACs with invasive carcinomas measuring >= 3 mmthat had adequate tissue were analyzed immunohistochemically. Results MMR loss was detected in 18% of ACs (higher than in colorectal cancers). Twelve tumors with MLH1-PMS2 loss were negative forBRAF V600Emutation, suggesting a Lynch syndrome association. MMR-deficient tumors (n = 23), comparedwith MMR-intact tumors (n = 104), showed a striking male predominance (male:female ratio, 4.7). Although the deficient tumors had slightly larger invasion size (2.7 vs 2.1 cm), they also had more expansile growth and less invasiveness, including less perineural invasion, and they ultimately had lower tumor (T) classification and less lymph node metastasis (30% vs 53%;P = .04). More important, patients who had MMR-deficient tumors had better clinical outcomes, with a 5-year overall survival rate of 68% versus 45% (P = .03), which was even more pronounced in those who had higher Tclassification (5-year overall survival, 69% vs 34%;P = .04). MMR deficiencyhad a statistically significant association with medullary phenotype, pushing-border invasion, and tumor-infiltrating immune cells, and it occurred more frequently in ampullary-duodenal type tumors. Programed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) levels analyzed in the 22 MMR-deficient ACs revealed that all medullary carcinomas were positive. Nonmedullary MMR-deficient carcinomas expressed PD-L1 in 33% of tumors cells according to the criteria for a combined positive score >= 1, but all were negative according to the tumor proportion score >= 1 method. Conclusions In ACs, MMR deficiency is even more frequent (18%) than in colon cancer and often has a Lynch-suggestive profile, thus routine testing is warranted. Male gender, pushing-border infiltration, ampullary-duodenal origin, medullary histology, and tumor-related inflammation have a significantly higher association with MMR deficiency. MMR-deficient tumors have less aggressive behavior. PD-L1 expression is common in medullary-phenotype ACs, thus immunotherapy should be considered at least for this group

    36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine : Brussels, Belgium. 15-18 March 2016.

    Get PDF

    Erratum to: 36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

    No full text
    corecore