Introduction: Salivary duct carcinoma (SDC) is an aggressive and rare subtype of salivary gland carcinoma. Surgical excision and radiotherapy are standard of care for early cancer. Chemotherapies with taxanes and platinum show overall response rates between 39% and 50%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: When surgical axillary staging reveals residual metastatic deposits in breast cancer (BC) patients who had received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), axillary lymphonodectomy is indicated. In this study, we investigate whether it is reasonable to perform intraoperative frozen section (FS) of the removed sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) in cases where NACT had been administered in patients who had a clinically negative nodal status at the time of diagnosis.
Patients And Methods: We analyzed data from 101 BCE patients with 103 carcinomas who were diagnosed between 2014 and 2021 and met the above-mentioned criteria.
The expression of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) protein or gene transcripts is critical for therapeutic decision making in breast cancer. We examined the performance of a digitalized and artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted workflow for HER2 status determination in accordance with the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)/College of Pathologists (CAP) guidelines. Our preliminary cohort consisted of 495 primary breast carcinomas, and our study cohort included 67 primary breast carcinomas and 30 metastatic deposits, which were evaluated for HER2 status by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and in situ hybridization (ISH).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemoradiotherapy (CRT) for locally-advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (LA-HSNCC) yields 5-year survival rates near 50% despite causing significant toxicity. Dichloroacetate (DCA), a pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase metabolic inhibitor, reduces tumor lactate production and has been used in cancer therapy previously. The safety of adding this agent to CRT is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunotherapy, including PD-1/PD-L1 agonists, has shown limited efficacy in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). We examined the PD-1/PD-L1 expression and immunoarchitectural features by automated morphometric analysis using multiplex immunofluorescence and 118 microsatellite-stable, treatment-naïve, surgically resected PDACs (study cohort). Five microsatellite-instable cases were stained in parallel (MSI cohort).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Effective workflow management in a diagnostic pathology laboratory is critical to achieve rapid turnover while maintaining high quality. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis (FISH) is the preferred technique for detecting single chromosomal aberrations in diagnostic surgical pathology.
Material And Methods: FISH analysis applying a rapid hybridization protocol and using an automated whole-slide fluorescence scanning device (3DHISTECH, Sysmex, Switzerland) were implemented in our workflow.
Lobular neoplasia (LN), invasive lobular breast cancer (ILBC) and related pleomorphic variants represent a distinct group of neoplastic mammary gland lesions. This study assessed the inter-observer agreement of histological grading in a series of ILBC and LN. 54 cases (36x ILBC, 18x LN) were evaluated by 17 observers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMixed adenoneuroendocrine carcinoma (MANEC) is a rare, aggressive tumor arising from different localizations along the gastrointestinal tract with generally poor prognosis. We present the case of a 51-year-old female patient with histopathologically confirmed diagnosis of a MANEC of the descending colon. At presentation, the tumor had already spread to the liver causing extensive hepatic metastases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This study was designed to investigate the presence of residual breast tissue (RBT) after skin-sparing mastectomy (SSM) and nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) and to analyse patient- and therapy-related factors associated with RBT. Skin-sparing mastectomy and NSM are increasingly used surgical procedures. Prospective data on the completeness of breast tissue resection is lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeripheral giant cell granuloma (PRZG) is a locally reactive, non-neoplastic oral tissue proliferation. Histologically, the peripheral form is indistinguishable from the rarer central form of RCC in the jaw area. PRZG usually occur on the gingiva, but are occasionally also found on the palate and the alveolar ridge of the edentulous jaw, very rarely also in the peri-implant tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) is a potentially life-threatening complication of transplantation occurring in the setting of immunosuppression and oncogenic viral infections. However, little is known about the cumulative incidence, histological subtypes, risk determinants and outcome of PTLD in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients in Switzerland.
Methods: This retrospective observational study investigated adult SOT recipients from two sequential cohorts, the pre-SCTS (Swiss Transplant Cohort Study) series, with data collected from January 1986 to April 2008, and the STCS series, with data collected from May 2008 to December 2014 in Switzerland.
Ultrasound-driven microbubbles have been used in therapeutic applications to deliver drugs across capillaries and into cells or to dissolve blood clots. Yet the performance and safety of these applications have been difficult to control. Microbubbles exposed to ultrasound not only volumetrically oscillate, but also move due to acoustic radiation, or Bjerknes, forces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol
August 2018
Background: Primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma (PCMZL) is the second most common B-cell lymphoma of the skin. A recent study has demonstrated a strikingly high prevalence of immunoglobulin (Ig)G4 expression in PCMZL with plasmacytic differentiation.
Objective: The objective was to investigate the incidence of IgG4 expression in PCMZL, and its correlation with clinical and immunophenotypic features.
Despite the promise of microbubble-mediated focused ultrasound therapies, in vivo findings have revealed over-treated and under-treated regions distributed throughout the focal volume. This poor distribution cannot be improved by conventional pulse shapes and sequences, due to their limited ability to control acoustic cavitation dynamics within the ultrasonic focus. This paper describes the design of a rapid short-pulse (RaSP) sequence which is comprised of short pulses separated by μs off-time intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The tumor microenvironment is essential for tumor survival, growth and progression. There are only a few studies on the tumor microenvironment in cutaneous CD30-positive lymphoproliferative disorders.
Methods: We assessed the composition of the tumor microenvironment using immunohistochemistry studies in skin biopsies from cases diagnosed with lymphomatoid papulosis (LyP: 18 specimens), primary cutaneous anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (PC-ALCL: 8 specimens), and reactive diseases harboring CD30-positive cells (18 specimens).
Ultrasound-driven bubbles can cause significant deformation of soft viscoelastic layers, for instance in surface cleaning and biomedical applications. The effect of the viscoelastic properties of a boundary on the bubble-boundary interaction has been explored only qualitatively, and remains poorly understood. We investigate the dynamic deformation of a viscoelastic layer induced by the volumetric oscillations of an ultrasound-driven microbubble.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with a lymphoma have an increased risk of developing a second lymphoproliferative disorder. The association of nodal Hodgkin lymphoma and primary cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma (MALT type) is exceptional, and only very few cases have been documented. Anetoderma represents a circumscribed loss or rarefication of elastic fibers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) is characterized by a low percentage of tumor cells in a background of diverse, reactive immune cells. cHL cells commonly derive from preapoptotic germinal-center B cells and are characterized by the loss of B-cell markers and the varying expression of other hematopoietic lineage markers. This phenotypic variability and the scarcity of currently available cHL-specific cell surface markers can prevent clear distinction of cHL from related lymphomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHodgkin's lymphoma (HL) is among the most frequent nodal lymphomas in the Western world and is classified into two disease entities: nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin's lymphoma (NLPHL) and classical Hodgkin's lymphoma (cHL, 95% of all HL). HL lesions are characterised by a minority of clonal neoplastic cells, namely Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells and their variants in cHL and lymphocyte-predominant (LP) cells in NLPHL, both occurring within a microenvironment of, for example, reactive T and B cells, macrophages and granulocytes that are assumed to support the proliferation and maintenance of neoplastic cells through cytokines, chemokines and growth factors. Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is an important growth factor involved in proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and cell survival of numerous (including immune) tissues and probably has a role in tumour pathogenesis and maintenance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The methylation of DNA at position 5 of cytosine, and the subsequent reduction in intracellular 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC) levels, is a key epigenetic event in several cancers, including systemic lymphomas. However, no studies have analyzed this epigenetic marker in cutaneous lymphomas. Therefore, we aimed to analyze the expression of 5-hmC in cutaneous CD30-positive lymphoproliferative disorders and compare it with a control group composed of reactive infectious and inflammatory disorders with CD30-positive cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudolymphomatous infiltrates in Borrelia infection of the skin most commonly manifest with dense B-cell infiltrates and plasma cells. Cutaneous infiltrates of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) may accumulate at sites of infection, including Borrelia infection. We report an unusual constellation in a patient with synchronously diagnosed B-CLL and Borrelia infection of skin presenting with a dense dermal T-cell-rich infiltrate masking specific leukemic infiltrates of neoplastic B cells in the context of B-CLL harboring t(14;18)(q32;q21).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a heterogenous, clonal mast cell (MC) proliferation, rarely associated with clonal hematologic non-mast cell lineage disease (SM-AHNMD). KIT (D816V) is regarded as driver-mutation in SM-AHNMD.
Methods: DNA isolated from peripheral blood (PB) of an SM-CMML patient was investigated with targeted next generation sequencing.
Background: CD30 is expressed in aggressive and Epstein-Barr virus-associated forms of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, but is rarely expressed by the majority of tumor cells in primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCLs). The expression of CD30 in CBCLs may be at risk for misinterpretation as an unequivocal indicator of a highly aggressive form of the disease.
Objective: We report 4 cases of low malignant primary cutaneous follicle center lymphoma (PCFCL) with diffuse and strong expression of CD30 by the majority of neoplastic cells.