1,721,025 research outputs found
Morphological quality and nucleic acid preservation in cytopathology
Background: Fixation is a chemical or physical procedure to prevent the degradation of proteins and tissue morphology. To optimise molecular analysis of archival tissues, it is essential that fixation preserves morphology along with protein epitopes and DNA/RNA integrity.
Methods: A new formalin-free alcoholic-based fixative, FineFIX, was used to fix 15 serous effusions and 38 fine-needle aspirates, and cellular morphology and nucleic acid quality were evaluated.
Results: The cytomorphology of the effusions and fine-needle aspirates obtained with FineFIX fixation was similar to that obtained with formalin-fixed counterparts. Immunocytochemistry showed comparable results with the traditional fixative, but FineFIX preserved higher-molecular-mass DNA and RNA, as demonstrated by successful PCR of large amplification products of >2000 bp.
Conclusions: The formalin-free fixative produced not only satisfactory results for immunocytochemistry on cytological smears and cell blocks, but also excellent preservation of DNA and RNA, which can also be efficiently used for sophisticated molecular techniques
Four cases of solitary fibrous tumour of th eye and orbit: one with sarcomatous transformation after radiotherapy and one ina a 5 year-old child's eyelid
BACKGROUND: Solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) is quite a rare neoplasm involving the eye and the orbit. It is described as showing benign behaviour in adults, but malignant cases are exceptionally reported in this location. This report describes four new cases of SFT/giant cell angiofibroma (GCA) of the eyelid and orbit, one in a 5-year-old child, and one with sarcomatous dedifferentiated transformation occurring 9 years after radiotherapy.
METHODS: Four cases of ocular SFT/GCA were retrieved from the database of the Pathological Anatomy Unit, University of Padova; immunohistochemistry and RT-PCR were used to identify COL1A1-PDBGF fusion gene transcripts in all cases.
RESULTS: In case 1, late relapse 9 years later was characterised by abrupt transition into a high-grade component, associated with a non-distinctive high-grade sarcomatous area. The latter component was CD34, CD99 and Bcl2 negative and smooth muscle actin positive. Molecular characterisation showed the absence of COL1A1-PDGFB fusion transcripts in cases 1, 3 and 4, excluded diagnosis of giant cell fibroblastoma in all cases. Analysis could not be performed in case 2.
CONCLUSIONS: An eyelid SFT/GCA in a 5-year-old child is the youngest case reported in the literature, indicating that the tumour is not exclusive to adults. The case with sarcomatous transformation, with dedifferentiated features occurring 9 years after radiotherapy, raises some questions about the choice of treatment for ocular SFT, in which excision is sometimes difficult without devastating surger
Four cases of solitary fibrous tumour of the eye and orbit: one with sarcomatous transformation after radiotherapy and one in a 5-year-old child's eyelid.
BACKGROUND:
Solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) is quite a rare neoplasm involving the eye and the orbit. It is described as showing benign behaviour in adults, but malignant cases are exceptionally reported in this location. This report describes four new cases of SFT/giant cell angiofibroma (GCA) of the eyelid and orbit, one in a 5-year-old child, and one with sarcomatous dedifferentiated transformation occurring 9 years after radiotherapy.
METHODS:
Four cases of ocular SFT/GCA were retrieved from the database of the Pathological Anatomy Unit, University of Padova; immunohistochemistry and RT-PCR were used to identify COL1A1-PDBGF fusion gene transcripts in all cases.
RESULTS:
In case 1, late relapse 9 years later was characterised by abrupt transition into a high-grade component, associated with a non-distinctive high-grade sarcomatous area. The latter component was CD34, CD99 and Bcl2 negative and smooth muscle actin positive. Molecular characterisation showed the absence of COL1A1-PDGFB fusion transcripts in cases 1, 3 and 4, excluded diagnosis of giant cell fibroblastoma in all cases. Analysis could not be performed in case 2.
CONCLUSIONS:
An eyelid SFT/GCA in a 5-year-old child is the youngest case reported in the literature, indicating that the tumour is not exclusive to adults. The case with sarcomatous transformation, with dedifferentiated features occurring 9 years after radiotherapy, raises some questions about the choice of treatment for ocular SFT, in which excision is sometimes difficult without devastating surgery
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Expression of maspin in papillary Ta/T1 bladder neoplasms
The aim of the present study was to evaluate maspin expression in bladder urothelial papillary neoplasms and test the results for correlation with clinicopathological parameters.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
A total of 111 urothelial neoplasms from 66 patients were evaluated: pathological examination of primary tumours disclosed 48 pTa and 18pT1. Fourteen additional biopsies, negative for neoplasm, were collected as control biopsies. For each of the 111 neoplastic samples and for the 14 control cases maspin and MIB1 immunoreactivity was evaluated. The immunohistochemical reactions of the 66 primary neoplasms were used for statistical analysis when the disease-free interval, presence and number of relapses, and progression of the disease were tested, whereas all of the 111 tumors were used when the association between the maspin pattern and histological grade and/or pT were evaluated. Thirty-three patients with primary pTa papillary neoplasms (68.7%) and 11 out of eighteen with pT1 (61%), had subsequent relapses of disease. For maspin immunoreactivity the presence/absence of nuclear staining and the pattern of staining were considered. Four patterns of reactivity were recognized and were used for statistical analyses.
RESULTS:
A statistical association was found between the maspin pattern and pT, histological grade and nuclear staining.
CONCLUSION:
In papillary urothelial neoplasms, maspin has a pattern of distribution that is associated with the histological grade and pathological stage, and this probably reflects its different activities in the neoplastic process
Laryngeal carcinoma recurrence rate and disease-free interval are related to CD105 expression but not to vascular endothelial growth factor 2 (Flk-1/Kdr) expression.
BACKGROUND:
Tumour angiogenesis is the result of an inbalance between anti- and pro-angiogenic factors. CD105 (endoglin) is a component of the receptor complex of transforming growth factor (TGF-beta1). Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2 or Flk-1/KDR) belongs to the high-affinity VEGF receptors. The aim of the study was to investigate the expression, cellular localization and role of CD105 and VEGFR2 in laryngeal carcinoma.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
Sections of 62 laryngeal carcinomas were stained with CD105 and VEGFR2/Flk-1/KDR antibodies.
RESULTS:
A significant association between CD105 expression and locoregional recurrence was found (p = 0.009). Interestingly, in N0 patients CD105 expression was significantly associated with locoregional recurrence of the carcinoma (p = 0.03). The log-rank test showed a significant difference in the disease-free interval in patients stratified according to CD105 expression (p = 0.02). Statistical analysis showed no significant associations between vessel endothelial cell or laryngeal carcinoma cell VEGFR2 expressions and recurrence of disease or disease-free intervals.
CONCLUSION:
CD105 expression but not VEGFR2 expression correlated with carcinoma recurrence after treatment and shorter disease free interval. The CD105 expression may be useful to detect cervical node-negative patients with a higher risk of early laryngeal carcinoma recurrence
- …
