Patients with a twin pregnancy consisting of a complete mole and a normal fetus are at increased risk for hemorrhage and medical complications, as well as the development of persistent gestational trophoblastic tumor.
Before high-grade papillary serous carcinoma (HG-PSC) becomes invasive, it is believed to be a poorly defined short-lived precursor lesion. A recent characterization of serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC) and of the p53 signature suggested that HG-PSC may follow a stepwise progression on cellular and molecular levels. High-mobility group AT-hook 2 (HMGA2), an oncofetal protein, is overexpressed in ovarian cancer. To test whether HMGA2 can be another valuable marker for STIC, we examined HMGA2 expression in 3 groups of patients: (1) 24 patients with STIC and its invasive counterpart, HG-PSC of the fallopian tubes, (2) 24 patients with HG-PSC of the ovaries but without STIC (positive control), and (3) 30 patients with cancer and normal fallopian tubes (negative control). We found that HMGA2 was overexpressed in 75% of patients with STIC, was coexpressed with p53 in more than 50% of patients, and was completely negative in the secretory cells of the 30 patients with normal fallopian tubes. Among 7 patients with cells negative for p53 staining, HMGA2 was positive in 5; among 6 patients whose tumor cells were negative for HMGA2 in STIC, 3 were positive for HMGA2 in the invasive component; about 70% of invasive HG-PSC tumor cells were immunoreactive for both HMGA2 and TP53. In invasive carcinoma, HMGA2 overexpression was correlated with p53 (r=0.45), indicating the role of HMGA2 in p53 mediated tumor progression. Our findings of immunoreactivity for HMGA2 may lead to a novel, useful biomarker to complement p53 in the detection of early-stage serous carcinoma.
Signet-ring cell change (SCC) is a nonneoplastic condition that morphologically simulates signet-ring cell carcinoma (SRCA). The few case reports on SCC have focused on morphologic characteristics in distinguishing benign from malignant. In biopsy specimens, however, SCC can be easily confused with SRCA, which often demonstrates innocuous cytologic features. The object of this study is twofold: 1) to report 14 additional cases of SCC, comparing their morphologic and phenotypic features with that of SRCA; and 2) to evaluate the incidence of SCC in pseudomembranous colitis. Paraffin sections of biopsy or resection specimens containing focal or extensive SCC and 5 cases of colonic SRCA were stained with hematoxylin and eosin, periodic-acid Schiff stain with and without diastase digestion, and by standard ABC immunoperoxidase procedure using antibodies to E-cadherin, p53, and Ki-67. Both cells in SCC and SRCA were strongly positive for neutral mucins. Cells in SCC were strongly positive for E-cadherin and negative for p53 and Ki-67. In contrast, cells in SRCA were strongly positive for p53, exhibited high proliferation, and demonstrated absent or weak positivity for E-cadherin. Although SCC is not well recognized in pseudomembranous colitis, the incidence is fairly high: 14 of 50 (28%) cases showed variable numbers of signet-ring cells. Extensive SCC, although rare, can occur in different clinical conditions and can be easily mistaken for SRCA. When in doubt, routine immunohistochemical stains such as p53, Ki-67, and E-cadherin can help to differentiate SCC from SRCA.
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