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1.
Chest ; 159(1): e1-e5, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33422233

ABSTRACT

Sclerosing pneumocytoma (SP) is a rare primary lung tumor. Typical carcinoids (TCs) count for 2% of lung malignancies. A description of a combined neoplasm of SP with a nodal and pleural metastasized TC has, to our knowledge, never been published. A 57-year-old actively smoking woman received a diagnosis of a lesion in the left lower lobe via a screening CT scan for rheumatoid arthritis. A fluorodeoxyglucose-PET scan confirmed a 21 × 26 × 16 mm (standardized uptake maximum value, 3.0), well-circumscribed round lesion with calcification, which was thought to be most probably benign. No mediastinal lymph node enlargement or fluorodeoxyglucose uptake was detected. The results of routine laboratory tests, respiratory function tests, and physical examination were unremarkable. In diagnostic thoracoscopy pleural, diaphragmatic, and pericardial lesions were discovered and biopsied in addition to a wedge resection. After diagnosis of a pleural metastasized TC mixed with SP, radical resection and systemic lymph node dissection were performed. The patient is in remission after 36 months of follow-up.


Subject(s)
Carcinoid Tumor/secondary , Lung Neoplasms/diagnosis , Lung Neoplasms/secondary , Pleural Neoplasms/pathology , Pulmonary Sclerosing Hemangioma/diagnosis , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/surgery , Middle Aged , Pneumonectomy , Pulmonary Sclerosing Hemangioma/surgery
3.
Ophthalmology ; 124(2): 178-188, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27871762

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate and characterize clinical and histopathologic ocular findings in patients with disseminated infection with Mycobacterium chimaera, a slow-growing nontuberculous mycobacterium (NTM), subsequent to cardiothoracic surgery. DESIGN: Observational case series. PARTICIPANTS: Five white patients (10 eyes). METHODS: Analysis of clinical ocular findings, including visual acuity, slit-lamp biomicroscopy, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT), fundus autofluorescence (FAF), and fluorescein angiography/indocyanine green (ICG) angiography findings, of patients with a disseminated M. chimaera infection. Biomicroscopic and multimodal imaging findings were compared with the histopathology of 1 patient. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical and histopathologic ocular findings of M. chimaera. RESULTS: The mean age of the 5 male patients, diagnosed with endocarditis or aortic graft infection, was 57.8 years. Clinical ocular findings included anterior and intermediate uveitis, optic disc swelling, and white-yellowish choroidal lesions. Multifocal choroidal lesions were observed bilaterally in all patients and were hyperfluorescent on fluorescein angiography, hypofluorescent on ICG angiography, and correlated with choroidal lesions on SD OCT. The extent of choroidal lesions varied from few in 2 patients to widespread miliary lesions in 3 patients leading to localized choroidal thickening with elevation of the overlying retinal layers. Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography through regressing lesions revealed altered outer retinal layers and choroidal hypertransmission. The ocular findings were correlated with the course of the systemic disease. Patients with few choroidal lesions had a favorable outcome, whereas all patients with widespread chorioretinitis died of systemic complications of M. chimaera infection despite long-term targeted antimicrobial therapy. Ocular tissue was obtained from 1 patient at autopsy. Necropsy of 2 eyes of 1 patient revealed prominent granulomatous lymphohistiocytic choroiditis with giant cells. CONCLUSIONS: M. chimaera infection subsequent to cardiothoracic surgery is a novel entity that has been recently described. It involves multiple organ systems and can cause life-threatening disseminated disease. The ocular manifestations documented using multimodal imaging allow us to use the eye as a window to the systemic infection.


Subject(s)
Cardiopulmonary Bypass , Eye Diseases/etiology , Eye Infections, Bacterial/etiology , Mycobacterium Infections/complications , Mycobacterium/isolation & purification , Postoperative Complications , Aged , Chimera , Endocarditis, Bacterial/complications , Eye/microbiology , Eye Diseases/microbiology , Eye Diseases/pathology , Eye Diseases/physiopathology , Eye Infections, Bacterial/microbiology , Female , Fluorescein Angiography , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Middle Aged , Mycobacterium Infections/etiology , Tomography, Optical Coherence , Visual Acuity
4.
Mod Pathol ; 27(6): 899-905, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24232866

ABSTRACT

Cancer testis antigens are encoded by germ line-associated genes that are present in normal germ cells of testis and ovary but not in differentiated tissues. Their expression in various human cancer types has been interpreted as 're-expression' or as intratumoral progenitor cell signature. Cancer testis antigen expression patterns have not yet been studied in germ cell tumorigenesis with specific emphasis on intratubular germ cell neoplasia unclassified as a precursor lesion for testicular germ cell tumors. Immunohistochemistry was used to study MAGEA3, MAGEA4, MAGEC1, GAGE1 and CTAG1B expression in 325 primary testicular germ cell tumors, including 94 mixed germ cell tumors. Seminomatous and non-seminomatous components were separately arranged and evaluated on tissue microarrays. Spermatogonia in the normal testis were positive, whereas intratubular germ cell neoplasia unclassified was negative for all five CT antigens. Cancer testis antigen expression was only found in 3% (CTAG1B), 10% (GAGE1, MAGEA4), 33% (MAGEA3) and 40% (MAGEC1) of classic seminoma but not in non-seminomatous testicular germ cell tumors. In contrast, all spermatocytic seminomas were positive for cancer testis antigens. These data are consistent with a different cell origin in spermatocytic seminoma compared with classic seminoma and support a progression model with loss of cancer testis antigens in early tumorigenesis of testicular germ cell tumors and later re-expression in a subset of seminomas.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Neoplasm/analysis , Antigens, Neoplasm/biosynthesis , Carcinogenesis/metabolism , Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal/metabolism , Testicular Neoplasms/metabolism , Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Membrane Proteins/biosynthesis , Neoplasm Proteins/biosynthesis , Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal/pathology , Testicular Neoplasms/pathology , Tissue Array Analysis
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