Publications by authors named "DIEBOLD J"

Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCL) have been generally reported to have a worse prognosis than B-cell lymphomas (BCL). Because of their heterogeneity and scarcity, the outcomes of the different histological subtypes have not been compared. From October 1987 to March 1993, 1,883 patients with diffuse aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) included in the LNH87 protocol could be assessed for both morphology and immunophenotyping.

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Clinical and hematological abnormalities can occur in patients receiving intravenous fat emulsions as part of a long-term parenteral nutrition; they consist of hepatosplenomegaly and peripheral blood cytopenia(s). These abnormalities lead to bone marrow examination which revealed numerous macrophages laden with blue staining pigment granules and separate lipid vacuoles, presenting the typical histochemical characteristics of sea-blue histiocytes. Thus, long-term parenteral nutrition including fat-emulsion sources may represent a further condition in addition to the wide variety of disorders which can be associated with sea-blue histiocytosis.

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The protein tyrosine kinase p56lck is critical for the generation of mature thymocytes in adult mice. However its requirement during the maturation of thymocytes from the fetal to the adult stage has not been clearly defined. We analyzed prenatal and postnatal thymocyte maturation in mice deficient for p56lck (lck[-/-]).

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The phenotypic variability of epithelial ovarian neoplasms correlates with a diversity of changes on the molecular level. Invasive serous and undifferentiated ovarian carcinomas are characterized by p53 mutations, extensive loss of genetic material of chromosome 17 and complex changes on many other chromosomes. These alterations are seen only in a minority of mucinous and endometrioid carcinomas, mainly in advanced stages.

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Intravascular lymphomatosis is characterized by a proliferation of malignant lymphoid cells within the lumen of arteriola, capillaria or venula. It is a very rare neoplasia (less than 200 cases reported). Many organs can be involved, but preferentially the central nervous system.

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Inhibitors of programmed cell death (apoptosis) may regulate tissue differentiation and aberrantly promote cell survival in neoplasia. A novel apoptosis inhibitor of the IAP gene family, designated survivin, was recently found in all of the most common human cancers but not in normal, terminally differentiated adult tissues. The expression of survivin in embryonic and fetal development was investigated.

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We report on a rare case of fatal congenital alveolar capillary dysplasia. The newborn boy of a 37 weeks' normal gestation suffered from persistent pulmonary hypertension without any cardiovascular malformation and died at the age of 4 weeks despite intensive treatment. The autopsy tissue was examined histologically, immunohistochemically, and ultrastructurally.

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Anaplastic, CD30+, large-cell lymphoma is now a well-recognized pathologic entity that accounts for 2% to 8% of all lymphomas. Recent progress has been made in the understanding of certain biologic features found in anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, but information about its clinical behavior, in comparison to other large-cell lymphomas, is limited. The pathologic review of a large multicenter study of the treatment of aggressive lymphoma identified 146 cases of anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) on the basis of morphology and CD30 expression.

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Extending our previous efforts to characterize ovarian neoplasms by interphase cytogenetics, we analyzed a series of 32 mucinous tumors by nonisotopic in situ hybridization with seven different centromere-specific probes as well as by flow and image DNA cytometry; we then compared the data with results of p53 and Ki67 immunohistochemistry and MYC DNA-PCR analysis and of the clinical follow-ups. Of the tumors studied, 11 of 14 (78.6%) mucinous carcinomas, 7 of 7 (100%) mucinous tumors of low malignant potential (LMP), and 7 of 11 (63.

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CD56 expression has been reported previously in some non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) characterization. They principally involve the nasopharynx, are related to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and may be classified as either T- or non-T-natural killer (NK) cells according to CD3/T-cell receptor (TCR) status at the genomic or protein level. The present study reports three cases of non-nasal NK-NHL with the following characteristics: an agressive clinical behavior, heterogenous morphological data evoking pleomorphic T-cell malignant lymphoma, a non-T-NK phenotype using flow cytometry, and immunochemistry.

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Purpose: The aims of this study were as follows: (1) to analyze clinical, histopathologic characteristics, treatment outcome, and prognostic factors of patients with follicular large-cell lymphoma (FLCL); and (2) to compare them with those of patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLCL) treated in the same therapeutic trial.

Patients And Methods: Eighty-nine FLCL patients who were histologically reviewed and who received an intensive chemotherapy regimen according to the LNH 87 protocol were analyzed and compared with 1,096 B-cell DLCL patients included in the same protocol.

Results: After intensive induction treatment, 59 patients (67%) achieved a complete remission [CR].

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Malignant non Hodgkin's lymphomas in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome are usually of high grade and have a B-cell phenotype. We describe two cases of rare lymphomas during acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: one case of pleomorphic T cell lymphoma with medium and large cell predominance, of high grade of malignancy, according to the updated Kiel classification, involving mainly the bone-marrow, and one case of low grade monocytoid B-cell lymphoma with bone-marrow extension, which is a rare condition in this type of lymphoma. These lymphomas seem to be a casual event during acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, but the immunodeficiency can be responsible of a more aggressive behavior.

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The new human herpes virus 8 (HHV8) was recently detected in cases of body cavity based lymphoma (BCBL), a rare B cell lymphoma, mostly AIDS-associated. We investigated for HHV8 DNA sequences a series of 250 B or T cell lymphoproliferative malignancies, as seen in France, including 126 leukemias and 124 lymphomas (232 non-AIDS-associated and 18 AIDS-associated tumors). HHV8 sequences were detected in only three patients.

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Lymphomagenesis in HIV positive patients is a complex phenomenon not yet completely understood (Karp and Broder, 1992). The great majority of NHL are of the B cell type. Burkitt lymphoma seems to develop early during the evolution of HIV infection in patients with a CD4 count above 200/microliter.

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We report 2 cases of familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in two children, hétérozygous twins, born from consanguine parents. This disease is characterised by disseminated lymphohistiocytic infiltrates with hemophagocytosis, that most commonly involves bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, liver and central nervous system. Differential diagnosis is difficult with infection-induced hemophagocytic syndromes.

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A case of disseminated superficial porokeratosis (DSP) is reported in a black man 5 years after autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for acute promyelocytic leukemia. Porokeratosis is a rare hyperkeratotic disorder arising from clonal keratinocytes with a high potential to develop squamous cell carcinoma. Inherited forms are classical but recent observations of acquired porokeratosis have been reported in immunocompromized patients (AIDS, immune disorders, immune suppressive drugs or organ transplantation).

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We describe a case of left cervical stage I centroblastic lymphoma in a 29-year old male patient with Down's syndrome due to a (14; 21) Robertsonian translocation. The disease presented as extensive lymph node necrosis leaving rare areas of tumor cells, accounting for the diagnostic difficulties. According to our review of the literature, lymphoma is one of the most common neoplasms in DS patients and may represent the second most common malignancy in this condition, far behind leukemia.

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The effects of an alimentary lead deficiency on bone marrow morphology and several laboratory parameters of hemolysis were examined in two growth- and one generation-experiments with female Sprague Dawley rats. The animals were fed a semisynthetic casein-based diet supplemented with 0 ppb up to 800 ppb lead as Pb-II-acetat-3-hydrate. The evaluation of bone marrow did not show differences among the groups with different lead supply in the diet.

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T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma (TCRBCL) is an unusual lymphoma which is difficult to diagnose. A majority of reactive T-cells and numerous histiocytes mask the few large neoplastic B-cells. Fourteen cases of TCRBCL were studied in order to identify the main histological and cytological features useful for this diagnosis.

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There is increasing evidence that DNA ploidy is a prognostic factor in ovarian carcinomas, but it is uncertain whether MYC DNA amplification is an epiphenomenon of DNA nondiploidy or a distinct biological change with an impact on the clinical course of the disease. To clarify these issues we analysed DNA ploidy by flow and image cytometry and MYC copy number by polymerase chain reaction in archival material from ovarian carcinomas with known follow up. The results were compared with proliferative activity (Ki67 index) and p53 and bcl-2 expression.

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Bone marrow examination revealed a lipid-laden histiocytosis in seven patients undergoing long-term total parenteral nutrition necessitated by extensive short-bowel surgical resection. Clinical abnormalities occurred during this treatment which required bone marrow examination. These included hepatosplenomegaly and peripheral blood cytopenia; the median time to the detection of these abnormalities was 64 months.

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Whether lymphoepithelial cysts in the parotid glands in HIV-infected patients develop from pre-existing salivary gland inclusions in intraparotid lymph nodes or from a lymphoepithelial lesion of salivary parenchyma is unclear. To examine their pathogenesis we performed a histological and immunohistochemical study of salivary specimens from 100 AIDS patients in different disease stages. There is a continuous morphological spectrum of changes within the salivary parenchyma, starting with lymphoid stroma infiltration and evolving to characteristic lymphoepithelial duct lesions with a immunohistochemically proven basal cell proliferation and to fully developed ductal cysts.

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