3 research outputs found

    Prognostic Factors in Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma: Analysis of a Nationwide Molecularly/Immunohistochemically Confirmed Cohort of 57 Cases

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    Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (EHE) is an extremely rare vascular sarcoma with variable aggressive clinical behavior. In this retrospective study, we aimed to investigate prognostic factors based on clinicopathologic findings in a molecularly/immunohistochemically confirmed nationwide multicenter cohort of 57 EHE cases. Patients had unifocal disease (n = 29), multifocal disease (n = 5), lymph node metastasis (n = 8) and/or distant metastasis (n = 15) at the time of diagnosis. The overall survival rate was 71.4% at 1 year and 50.7% at 5 years. Survival did not correlate with sex, age or histopathological parameters. No survival differences were observed between multifocal and metastatic disease, suggesting that multifocality represents early metastases and treatment options are limited in comparison to unifocal disease. In unifocal tumors, survival could be predicted using the risk stratification model of Shibayama et al., dividing the cases into low- (n = 4), intermediate- (n = 15) and high- (n = 3) risk groups. No clinical or histopathological parameters were associated with progressive unifocal disease course. Lymph node metastases at the time of diagnosis occurred in 14.0% of the cases and were mainly associated with tumor localization in the head and neck area, proposing lymph node dissection. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the aggressive behavior of EHE, emphasize the prognostic value of a previously described risk stratification model and may provide new insights regarding tumor focality, therapeutic strategies and prognosis

    Assessment of HER2 status in breast cancer biopsies is not affected by accelerated tissue processing

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    Aims: To establish whether core needle biopsy (CNB) specimens processed with an accelerated processing method with short fixation time can be used to determine accurately the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status of breast cancer. Methods and results: A consecutive case–series from two high-volume breast clinics was created. We compared routine HER2 immunohistochemistry (IHC) assessment between accelerated processing CNB specimens and routinely processed postoperative excision specimens. Additional amplification-based testing was performed in cases with equivocal results. The formalin fixation time was less than 2 h and between 6 and 72 h, respectively. Fluorescence in-situ hybridisation and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification were used for amplification testing. One hundred and forty-four cases were included, 15 of which were HER2-positive on the routinely processed excision specimens. On the CNB specimens, 44 were equivocal on IHC and required an amplification-based test. Correlation between the CNB specimens and the corresponding excision specimens was high for final HER2 status, with an accuracy of 97% and a kappa of 0.85. Conclusions: HER2 status can be determined reliably on CNB specimens with accelerated processing time using standard clinical testing methods. Using this accelerated technology the minimum 6 h of formalin fixation, which current guidelines consider necessary, can be decreased safely. This allows for a complete and expedited histology-based diagnosis of breast lesions in the setting of a one-stop-shop, same-day breast clinic
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