To evaluate the role of mediastinal irradiation (RT) following surgery for invasive thymomas, a clinical and pathologic review of 117 patients with the diagnosis of thymoma was completed. Fourteen cases were excluded because of the lack of histologic criteria for a thymic tumor, and the remaining 103 were classified according to a staging system as follows: stage I, completely encapsulated (43); stage II, extension through the capsule or pericapsular fat invasion (21); stage III, invasion of adjacent structures (36); and stage IV, thoracic dissemination or metastases (3). The 5-year actuarial survival and relapse-free survival rates were 67% and 100% for stage I, 86% and 58% for stage II, and 69% and 53% for stage III. No recurrences occurred among stage I patients after total resection without RT. However, eight of 21 patients with invasive (stage II or III) thymomas had mediastinal recurrence as the first site of failure following total resection without RT. The 5-year actuarial mediastinal relapse rate of 53% in this group compares unfavorably with the mediastinal relapse rate seen among stage II or III cases following total resection with RT (0%) or following subtotal resection/biopsy with RT (21%). Despite attempted salvage therapy, five of eight patients with mediastinal relapse following total resection alone died of progressive disease. No significant difference was observed in the local relapse rate, overall relapse rate, or survival between those patients undergoing biopsy and RT v subtotal resection and RT for invasive thymomas (stages II and III). Total resection alone appears to be inadequate therapy resulting in an unacceptably high local failure rate with poor salvage therapy results.
Simian rotavirus SAil was shown to replicate in the gastrointestinal tracts of infant mice after oral inoculation. Clinical symptoms, histopathological changes in the small intestinal mucosa, and the type-specific humoral immune response were all characteristic of rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis. The availability of this small animal model for the study of a primate rotavirus infection should expedite analysis of the immune response necessary for protection against challenge.
After oral inoculation, reovirus serotype 1 strain Lang was shown to specifically infect the epithelial cels of the ileum, while sparing the epithelial cells in the duodenum, jejunum, and colon. The initial site of replication was localized in cells of the crypts of Lieberkuhn adjacent to Peyer's patches. Virus was subsequently found by immunoperoxidase staining in cells migrating up the crypt-villus complex throughout the ileum. The severity of the pathological changes in the ileum was proportional to the concentration of the viral inoculum. This site-specific infection of the ileum by reovirus may provide a model for diseases that are restricted to specific sites in the intestine.
Because the histologic features may resemble those of other mediastinal malignancies, thymic carcinoma can be difficult to diagnose, particularly if the primary site is uncertain. In an effort to facilitate this diagnosis, the authors have evaluated the use of immunohistochemistry with an antibody to CD5 (NCL-CD5). Nine thymic carcinomas, 15 thymomas, 8 lymphomas, 10 poorly differentiated lung carcinomas, 10 breast carcinomas, 1 mediastinal seminoma, and 1 thyroid carcinoma showing thymus-like differentiation (CASTLE) were studied. Four of 9 poorly differentiated carcinomas of the thymus were CD5 positive. The one CASTLE was CD5 positive. All other tumors were negative. CD5-positive lymphocytes were internal controls in every case. CD5 labels some thymic carcinomas in paraffin-embedded tissue, whereas other tumors studied were negative. CD5 immunoreactivity of CASTLE appears to support thymic derivation of this tumor.
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