Background: Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is an increasingly recognized disease only reported in the adult literature since 1993. Our facility has the opportunity to evaluate steroid-naive EoE patients since 1988, allowing us to describe the evolution of the histologic diagnosis of EoE.
Methods: This retrospective study analyzed 95 patient charts with initial diagnosis of congenital esophageal stenosis/EoE from 1988 to 2012.
Background: The significance of micrometastatic disease in the sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) of patients with invasive breast cancer has been questioned. The objective of our study was to review the impact of micrometastatic carcinoma detected by SLN biopsy.
Study Design: Between January 1997 and May 2004, 2,408 patients with invasive breast cancer and an SLN with micrometastatic (N0[i+], N1mi) or no metastatic (N0[i-]) disease were identified through our breast database.
Background: Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy combined with microstaging-associated immunohistochemical staining for cytokeratin more accurately assigns patients to their corresponding diagnostic stage. The purpose of this study was to compare the survival outcomes of node-negative patients who received an SLN biopsy with historical control data of node-negative patients who received routine complete axillary lymph node dissection (CALND) in the pre-SLN biopsy era.
Methods: Under institutional review board approval, 2458 node-negative invasive breast cancer patients between the ages of 25 and 94 years (mean, 60 years) were treated at our institution from January 1986 to May 2004.
Evidence suggesting that breast epithelial cells may reach axillary lymph nodes by benign mechanical transport (BMT), rather than metastatic means, has been recently reported. We report a case of a patient with ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast, who had displaced epithelial elements in the mastectomy specimen, dermal angiolymphatic spaces, and a sentinel lymph node. We attribute the epithelial aggregates in the dermal angiolymphatic spaces and a single cell in the sentinel lymph node to BMT, based on the clinicopathological findings of the case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe status of axillary lymph nodes is a key prognostic indicator available for the management of patients with breast cancer. Sentinel lymph node (SLN) evaluation as a predictor of lymph node status has led to increased use of ancillary methods, principally immunohistochemistry, to increase the sensitivity of the SLN biopsy. So-called "occult" micrometastases detected by such methods have led to speculation that some may have reached the SLNs by benign mechanical transport (BMT) rather than a metastatic process.
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December 2004
The evaluation of sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) for the presence of malignant epithelial cells is essential to the staging of breast cancer patients. Recently, increased attention has focused on the possibility that epithelial cells may reach SLNs by benign mechanical means, rather than by metastasis. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that pre-SLN biopsy breast massage, which we currently use to facilitate the localization of SLNs, might represent a mode of benign mechanical transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Wire localization (WL) is the current standard for surgical diagnosis of nonpalpable breast lesions. Many disadvantages inherent to WL are solved with radioactive seed localization (RSL). This trial investigated the ability of RSL to reduce the need for specimen radiographs and operating room delays associated with WL.
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