Carcinosarcoma and sarcomatoid carcinoma of the bladder are highly aggressive malignancies with a similar outcome regardless of histological findings and treatment. Pathological stage is the best predictor of survival.
An important component of high-dose chemotherapy/autologous bone marrow support regimens for adjuvant treatment of breast cancer is carmustine. Preclinical studies have shown that the level of the DNA repair protein O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase is correlated with the resistance of cultured human tumor cells to this drug, but little is known about transferase levels of breast tissue in vivo. We measured the DNA repair activity in 80 tissue samples from 65 patients, including normal, abnormal, benign, and malignant specimens. Wide interindividual variations was observed and average transferase levels were similar in normal and benign tissue. However, transferase levels were significantly elevated in stage I-IV disease. In addition, the frequency of samples with no detectable transferase was greatly reduced in this malignant group, and transferase was positively correlated with the presence of positive nodes, a marker for disease progression. In contrast, transferase levels were not correlated with age or estrogen receptor status, and the levels in normal tissue did not vary between patients with benign or malignant disease. These results suggest that this DNA repair activity may be increased in breast cancer relative to normal tissue and encourage further study of the predictive value of transferase measurements in high-dose chemotherapy/autologous bone marrow transplant for breast cancer.
The radial distance of EPE is an important measure that influences treatment strategies for patients with localized prostate carcinoma. Currently described criteria for the treatment of early stage prostate carcinoma by brachytherapy alone appear satisfactory to ensure effective radiation dose coverage of EPE of prostate tumors. Treating the prostate with a 3-5 mm margin by brachytherapy would encompass all known tumor in approximately 99% of the specimens examined in this study.
Melanosis coli is a relatively common condition in which pigment is deposited in macrophages in the colonic lamina propria. The association with anthraquinone laxatives is well described, but melanosis coli has also been described in patients not using these agents. We report 25 patients with inflammatory bowel disease and melanosis coli, 5 (20%) of whom had documented laxative use. Most patients had ulcerative colitis (72%) or Crohn's colitis (24%), and the mean duration of inflammatory bowel disease was more than 7 years. These data raise the possibility that chronic colitis could cause melanosis coli even in the absence of laxative use.
Many round, pale yellow, cytoplasmic inclusion bodies were found in hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections of a hyalinizing trabecular adenoma of the thyroid. The bodies were refractile and frequently had a microvacuolated or granular substructure. They were usually located close to the nucleus, often indented it, and rarely occurred within it. Histochemically, they showed a glycosaminoglycan, proteoglycan, and lipid content, displayed autofluorescence on exposure to ultraviolet light, and were unreactive with a variety of immunostains. Ultrastructurally, the inclusions were consistent with giant lysosomes, showing parallel whorled and arrayed membranes ("fingerprint" bodies) as a component of their substructure. Review of sections of 75 hyalinizing trabecular adenomas in our files revealed that the cytoplasmic bodies were present in all cases (100%), indicating that these inclusions most likely are a universal feature of the neoplasm.
There are an increasing number of reports concerning complications after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. We report a case of persistent elevation of serum alkaline phosphatase and spillage of several gallstones through an abdominocutaneous sinus tract to the umbilicus with spontaneous resolution.
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