65 research outputs found

    Malignant Glomus Tumour: A Case Report and Review of the Literature

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    Purpose: Glomus tumours are characteristically benign solitary tumours. At our knowledge, about 23 reports are present in literature regarding the malignant counterpart, but only a minority developed metastases. We describe a locally aggressive glomus tumour with lymphnode metastasis

    Leiomyosarcoma of the Oropharynx and Neurogenic Tumors in a Young Patient With Turner's Syndrome

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    Patient: A case of Turner's syndrome developing a leiomyosarcoma of the oropharynx and metachronous neurogenic tumors (mediastinal ‘ganglioneuroblastoma intermixed’, subcutaneous neurilemoma) is described

    Malignant glomus tumour: a case report and review of the literature. Sarcoma

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    Abstract Purpose: Glomus tumours are characteristically benign solitary tumours. At our knowledge, about 23 reports are present in literature regarding the malignant counterpart, but only a minority developed metastases. We describe a locally aggressive glomus tumour with lymphnode metastasis. Patient: The patient was a 40 year-old man presenting a 1.5-cm lesion on the right wrist incompletely excised and a recurrent tumour, 4 Â 2 cm in size, removed after 9 months, for which he received radiotherapy. After 2 years he developed an axillary lymphnode metastasis. Results: Histologically, both tumours (primary and metastasis) were similar. There were sheets and nests of uniform small cells with scant eosinophilic cytoplasm and round to polygonal nuclei; there was some degree of pleomorphism and the mitotic index was high (up to 18 m/10 HPF). The tumour cells were positive for vimentin and smooth muscle actin, but negative for desmin, NSE, Factor VIII, chromogranin, cytokeratin. Remarkably, in the primary, the cells strongly expressed p53 (70%) and MIB-1 (35%). Discussions: In many reported malignant cases, the histology of the tumour cells suggested that they were malignant, yet the clinical course has been benign. Carefully reviewing the literature, it seems that actually we have enough histological criteria to identify the cases with biological adverse outcome. Those unfortunate cases behave as high grade sarcomas and therefore may deserve an aggressive therapeutic treatment

    Pediatric-type sarcomas in adult patients.

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    Sarcomas included in the broad group of small round-cell tumors (SRCT) and some non-SRCT lesions that typically are seen in pediatric-age patients can rarely occur in adults. However, there are differences in the anatomic sites that are involved and the prognosis in these two patient groups. The diagnosis of pediatric-type sarcomas in adults is often challenging because of the unusual contextual clinical setting and morphologic features. Immunohistochemical studies have greatly facilitated this process. Moreover, limited biomolecular studies that have been conducted have demonstrated comparable cytogenetic alterations in adults and children with pediatric-type tumors. They also have raised interesting questions concerning possible biological bases for differences in clinical behavior in the two cohorts. This review focuses on the morphological, immunohistochemical, and molecular characteristics of childhood-type sarcomas that affect adults, with emphasis on possible pitfalls in differential diagnosis

    Histological evaluation of thyroid carcinomas: reproducibility of the "WHO" classification.

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    AIMS AND BACKGROUND: Thyroid carcinomas display several pathologic features, show different behavior and necessitate different treatment; thus correct classification is mandatory. METHODS: The kappa statistic was used as a measure of agreement in a panel of seven pathologists who reviewed 200 cases of thyroid tumors. RESULTS: Overall agreement was 83% (k = 68). Good agreement was found for anaplastic (k = 0.85) and papillary carcinomas (k = 0.81); agreement for medullary carcinoma was acceptable (k = 0.80), suboptimal for other (k = 0.67), and poor for follicular carcinoma (k = 0.54). CONCLUSIONS: Central pathology review of thyroid carcinomas is recommended when clinical and epidemiologic trials are planne

    Primary carcinoid tumor of the cystic and common bile ducts.

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    We report a case of primary carcinoid tumor arising at the confluence of the cystic and common bile ducts. The patient was a 64-year-old woman who developed a sudden onset of biliary colic and jaundice. Computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance showed a mass lesion close to the head of the pancreas. At laparotomy a nodular lesion was found at the confluence of the cystic and common bile ducts. Microscopic observation revealed a type B-C carcinoid (Soga's classification) with positive immunoreactivity to chromogranin and cytokeratin. The presence of neurosecretory intracytoplasmic granules was demonstrated by electron microscopy. Flow cytometry showed diploid DNA content of the neoplastic cells with less than 5% of the nuclei in the S-phase region

    Undifferentiated sarcoma: does it exist? A clinicopathologic study of 7 pediatric cases and review of literature.

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    Undifferentiated sarcomas are primitive mesenchymal tumors that cannot be classified among standardized histopathologic entities. Whether they represent a homogeneous group with common histogenesis and clinical behavior or comprise a variety of tumors able to differentiate along specific maturative lineages is still debated. To identify prognostic and histogenetic markers, we analyzed 7 undifferentiated sarcomas (4 in the trunk and 3 in the extremities). Mean patient age was 7.5 years, and mean follow-up was 18 months. Two clinicopathologic subtypes emerged from this study. Four primitive mesenchymal undifferentiated sarcomas arose mainly on the trunk and very proximal extremities, had an aggressive clinical course with poor outcome (3 deaths from disease, 1 with persistent disease), and displayed sheets of oval cells, with bland nuclei. Three spindle cell undifferentiated sarcomas arose on the extremities, had a favorable outcome, and showed elongated spindle cells with areas of primitive fibrosarcoma. All were negative for epithelial membrane antigen, cytokeratins, CD34, smooth muscle actin, desmin,Myf4, and HMB45 and showed nuclear staining for INI. Focal staining for S100 and CD99 was found in 3 and 4, respectively. Among stem cell markers, CD117 was positive in 3 cases (1 primitive, 2 spindle), nestin in 5 cases (4 primitive, 1 spindle), and CD105-stained tumor cells lining newly formed vascular spaces in 4 cases (1 primitive, 3 spindle). Survivin was weakly expressed in 6 cases and reflected low levels of mRNA (median survivin/GAPDH ratio, 1.096). Cytogenetic analysis revealed nonspecific translocations in 3 tumors. No translocations associated with Ewing sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, or alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma were found. In summary, primitive undifferentiated sarcomas occur in the trunk, behave aggressively, and express nestin. Spindle cell undifferentiated sarcomas occur in extremities, have a favorable outcome, resemble fibrosarcomas, and have similarly low survivin levels and display CD105-positive vascular spaces, which may represent an early hemangiopericytomatous patter

    An unusual case of malignant pilocytic astrocytoma occurring in the eye.

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    Pilocytic astrocytoma is a central nervous system neoplasia that arises during pediatric age. Only few cases have been documented in patients older than 50 years old. It is a low-grade lesion that can rarely undergo malignant changes presenting the histologic features of a high-grade glioma. We report a case of a pilocytic astrocytoma arising in the eyeball of a 53-year-old man affected by glaucoma that underwent malignant evolutio
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