14 research outputs found
Current concepts in the diagnosis and pathobiology of intraepithelial neoplasia: A review by organ system
Answer questions and earn CME/CNE In this report, a team of surgical pathologists has provided a review of intraepithelial neoplasia in a host of (but not all) anatomic sites of interest to colleagues in various medical specialties, namely, uterine cervix, ovary, breast, lung, head and neck, skin, prostate, bladder, pancreas, and esophagus. There is more experience with more readily accessible sites (such as the uterine cervix and skin) than with other anatomic sites, and the lack of uniform terminology, together with divergent biology in various sites, makes it difficult to paint a unifying, relevant portrait. The authors' aim was to provide a framework from which to move forward as we care for patients with such precancerous lesions. CA Cancer J Clin 2016;66:408-436. © 2016 American Cancer Society
A Broad Survey of Cathepsin K Immunoreactivity in Human Neoplasms
Cathepsin K is consistently and diffusely expressed in alveolar soft
part sarcoma (ASPS) and a subset of translocation renal cell carcinomas
(RCCs). However, cathepsin K expression in human neoplasms has not been
systematically analyzed. We constructed tissue microarrays (TMA) from a
wide variety of human neoplasms, and performed cathepsin K
immunohistochemistry (IHC). Only 2.7\% of 1,140 carcinomas from various
sites exhibited cathepsin K labeling, thus suggesting that among
carcinomas, cathepsin K labeling is highly specific for translocation
RCC. In contrast to carcinomas, cathepsin K labeling was relatively
common (54.6\%) in the 414 mesenchymal lesions studied, including
granular cell tumor, melanoma, and histiocytic lesions, but not
paraganglioma, all of which are in the morphologic differential
diagnosis of ASPS. Cathepsin K IHC can be helpful in distinguishing ASPS
and translocation RCC from some but not all of the lesions in their
differential diagnosis
Intermediate product selection and blending in the food processing industry
<p>This study addresses a capacitated intermediate product selection and blending problem typical for two-stage production systems in the food processing industry. The problem involves the selection of a set of intermediates and end-product recipes characterising how those selected intermediates are blended into end products to minimise the total operational costs under production and storage capacity limitations. A comprehensive mixed-integer linear model is developed for the problem. The model is applied on a data set collected from a real-life case. The trade-offs between capacity limitations and operational costs are analysed, and the effects of different types of cost parameters and capacity limitations on the selection of intermediates and end-product recipes are investigated.</p>
Prevalence of the alternative lengthening of telomeres telomere maintenance mechanism in human cancer subtypes
Approximately 10% to 15% of human cancers lack detectable telomerase activity, and a subset of these maintain telomere lengths by the telomerase-independent telomere maintenance mechanism termed alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT). The ALT phenotype, relatively common in subtypes of sarcomas and astrocytomas, has rarely been reported in epithelial malignancies. However, the prevalence of ALT has not been thoroughly assessed across all cancer types. We therefore comprehensively surveyed the ALT phenotype in a broad range of human cancers. In total, two independent sets comprising 6110 primary tumors from 94 different cancer subtypes, 541 benign neoplasms, and 264 normal tissue samples were assessed by combined telomere-specific fluorescence in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence labeling for PML protein. Overall, ALT was observed in 3.73% (228/6110) of all tumor specimens, but was not observed in benign neoplasms or normal tissues. This is the first report of ALT in carcinomas arising from the bladder, cervix, endometrium, esophagus, gallbladder, kidney, liver, and lung. Additionally, this is the first report of ALT in medulloblastomas, oligodendrogliomas, meningiomas, schwannomas, and pediatric glioblastoma multiformes. Previous studies have shown associations between ALT status and prognosis in some tumor types; thus, further studies are warranted to assess the potential prognostic significance and unique biology of ALT-positive tumors. These findings may have therapeutic consequences, because ALT-positive cancers are predicted to be resistant to anti-telomerase therapies