10 research outputs found

    Uncommon presentation of a rare tumour - incidental finding in an asymptomatic patient: case report and comprehensive review of the literature on intrapericardial solitary fibrous tumours

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    BACKGROUND: A solitary fibrous tumour is a rare, mainly benign spindle cell mesenchymal tumour most commonly originating from the pleura. An intrapericardial location of a solitary fibrous tumour is extremely unusual. We present a case of an asymptomatic patient with a slow-growing massive benign cardiac solitary fibrous tumour. CASE PRESENTATION: A 37-year-old asymptomatic female patient was referred to our hospital with an enlarged cardiac silhouette found on her screening chest X-ray. The echocardiographic examination revealed pericardial effusion and an inhomogeneous mobile mass located in the pericardial sac around the left ventricle. Cardiac magnetic resonance (MRI) examination showed an intrapericardial, semilunar-shaped mass attached to the pulmonary trunk with an intermediate signal intensity on proton density-weighted images and high signal intensity on T2-weighted spectral fat saturation inversion recovery images. First-pass perfusion and early and late gadolinium-enhanced images showed a vascularized mass with septated, patchy, inhomogeneous late enhancement. Coronary computed tomography angiography revealed no invasion of the coronaries. Based on the retrospectively analysed screening chest X-rays, the mass had started to form at least 7 years earlier. Complete resection of the tumour with partial resection of the pulmonary trunk was performed. Histological evaluation of the septated, cystic mass revealed tumour cells forming an irregular patternless pattern; immunohistochemically, the cells tested positive for vimentin, CD34, CD99 and STAT6 but negative for keratin (AE1-AE3), CD31 and S100. Thus, the diagnosis of an intrapericardial solitary fibrous tumour was established. There has been no recurrence for 3 years based on the regular MRI follow-up. CONCLUSION: Intrapericardial SFTs, showing slow growth dynamics, can present with massive extent even in completely asymptomatic patients. MRI is exceedingly useful for characterizing intrapericardial masses, allowing precise surgical planning, and is reliable for long-term follow up

    Current and Future Directions for Angiosarcoma Therapy

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    Angiosarcomas are rare vascular neoplasms that are among the most aggressive subtypes of soft tissue sarcomas. Surgical resection is often challenging even in localized disease, as the infiltrative nature of these cancers leads to frequent local and metastatic recurrences. Cytotoxic chemotherapy, including anthracycline-based regimens and taxanes can produce significant responses in a subset of patients but durability is limited with most patients ultimately succumbing to metastatic disease. Targeted therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors is usually well-tolerated but prone to development of resistance. Few head-to-head trials have addressed the optimal sequence of therapies, or demonstrated conclusive benefits of one therapy over another based on clinical and etiologic factors. Novel therapies in clinical trials, including antibodies to endoglin and checkpoint inhibitors have demonstrated exciting early activity in patients with angiosarcoma. Improved understanding of the genetic heterogeneity within various angiosarcoma subtypes may identify predictive biomarkers to match patients to effective existing and future therapies. Overall, angiosarcoma patients with optimal performance status are best served in clinical trials that incorporate novel combinations of cytotoxic chemotherapy, targeted therapies, and immunotherapies

    Extrathoracic Location and “Borderline” Histology are Associated with Recurrence of Solitary Fibrous Tumors After Surgical Resection

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    BACKGROUND: Most solitary fibrous tumors (SFTs) are cured by complete resection, but many recurrent and metastatic SFTs do not respond to treatment and are fatal. Malignant histology, defined by England’s pathologic criteria, is strongly associated with recurrence, but some benign SFTs still behave aggressively. Several studies have suggested that extrathoracic SFTs have a worse prognosis. We reviewed thoracic and extrathoracic SFTs from our institution to determine if extrathoracic location is associated with recurrence, independent of malignant histology. METHODS: With IRB approval, we retrieved patient pathology reports from the Johns Hopkins Surgical Pathology database between 1991 and 2011 and included 83 SFT patients in our analysis. Patient history and outcomes were obtained from the medical record and primary care physicians. Predictors of recurrence were analyzed by univariate and multivariate analysis and survival determined by the Kaplan–Meier method. RESULTS: Of the 83 patients, 59 had extrathoracic SFTs in neurologic (n = 24), extremity or head/neck (n = 13), or visceral/intraabdominal (n = 22) sites. A total of 74 SFTs were classified benign and 9 as malignant. Of the 14 recurrences, 13 occurred in extrathoracic SFTs; only 7 were classified as malignant. Multivariate analysis confirmed that malignant histology had the strongest association with recurrence, but extrathoracic location also independently predicted recurrence. A total of 20 benign SFTs possessed 1 or more of England’s criteria but to an insufficient degree for malignant classification. These “borderline” SFTs were more likely to recur than benign SFTs without these features. CONCLUSIONS: Extrathoracic and “borderline” SFTs with any of England’s criteria have a higher risk of recurrence

    A Novel Chordoma Xenograft Allows In Vivo Drug Testing and Reveals the Importance of NF-κB Signaling in Chordoma Biology

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    Chordoma is a rare primary bone malignancy that arises in the skull base, spine and sacrum and originates from remnants of the notochord. These tumors are typically resistant to conventional chemotherapy, and to date there are no FDA-approved agents to treat chordoma. The lack of in vivo models of chordoma has impeded the development of new therapies for this tumor. Primary tumor from a sacral chordoma was xenografted into NOD/SCID/IL-2R γ-null mice. The xenograft is serially transplantable and was characterized by both gene expression analysis and whole genome SNP genotyping. The NIH Chemical Genomics Center performed high-throughput screening of 2,816 compounds using two established chordoma cell lines, U-CH1 and U-CH2B. The screen yielded several compounds that showed activity and two, sunitinib and bortezomib, were tested in the xenograft. Both agents slowed the growth of the xenograft tumor. Sensitivity to an inhibitor of IκB, as well as inhibition of an NF-κB gene expression signature demonstrated the importance of NF-κB signaling for chordoma growth. This serially transplantable chordoma xenograft is thus a practical model to study chordomas and perform in vivo preclinical drug testing

    Targeted Radionuclide Therapy of Painful Bone Metastases: Past Developments, Current Status, Recent Advances and Future Directions

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