We report a retrospective clinicopathologic study of 108 primary thyroid gland lymphomas (PTLs), classified using the REAL and proposed WHO classification schemes. The patients included 79 women and 29 men, with an average age of 64.3 years. All patients presented with a thyroid mass. The PTLs were classified as marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) or MZBL (n = 30), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) with MZBL (n = 36), DLBCL without MZBL (n = 41), and follicle center lymphoma (FCL; n = 1). Excluding the FCL, features of lymphomas of MALT-type were identified in all groups, despite a follicular architecture in 23% of cases. Lymphocytic thyroiditis (LT) was identified in 94%. Ninety-one percent of patients presented with stage IE or IIE disease, whereas 69% had perithyroidal soft tissue infiltration. All patients were treated with surgical excision followed by adjuvant therapy (76%): chemotherapy (15%), radiation (19%), or a combination of radiation and chemotherapy (42%). Disease-specific survival was 82% at last follow up (mean, 82.8 mos) and 79% at 5 years. Statistically, stages greater than IE, presence of DLBCL, rapid clinical growth, abundant apoptosis, presence of vascular invasion, high mitotic rate, and infiltration of the perithyroidal soft tissue were significantly associated with death with disease. No patients with MZBL or stage IE disease died with disease. In summary, PTLs typically occur in middle- to older-aged individuals as a thyroid mass, with a predilection for females. Despite their histologic heterogeneity and frequent simulation of other lymphoma subtypes, virtually all PTLs are lymphomas of MALT-type arising in the setting of LT. Mixed DLBCL and MZBL are common. Overall, PTLs have a favorable outcome with appropriate therapy, but prognosis depends on both clinical stage and histology. MZBL and stage IE tumors have an excellent prognosis, whereas tumors with a large cell component or DLBCL or stage greater than IE have the greatest potential for a poor outcome.
BACKGROUND The criteria for minimally invasive (low grade) follicular carcinoma of the thyroid (MI) remain controversial, often resulting in unnecessary treatment. METHODS The records of 130 patients with minimally invasive (MI) follicular thyroid carcinoma were retrieved from the files of the Endocrine Tumor Registry of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. RESULTS Ninety‐five patients were confirmed to have MI based on the authors' criteria of small‐to‐medium vessel invasion, capsular invasion of up to full thickness, no parenchymal tumor extension, and no tumor necrosis (patients with oxyphilic tumors were excluded). The remaining 35 patients had tumors that were reclassified as “not low grade” based on large vessel invasion, extension into parenchyma, and tumor necrosis (oxyphilic cases excluded). The MI patients included 67 women and 28 men, ages 20–95 years (average, 42.0 years). Nearly all patients presented with a thyroid mass (n = 90 patients). The mean tumor size was 2.8 cm. Histologic features examined for tumor classification included cellularity, capsule nature, capsular invasion, vascular invasion, extension into parenchyma, cytoplasmic oxyphilia, mitotic activity, and necrosis. All patients were treated with surgical excision. Adjuvant radioactive iodine therapy was performed in 24 patients. Five patients developed recurrent disease: four were alive or had died without evidence of disease after additional treatment (mean, 18.1 years), and one patient died with disease (MI tumor) at 15.1 years. All of the remaining patients were disease free (mean follow‐up, 16.5 years). CONCLUSIONS There are reproducible histologic criteria to diagnose patients with MI follicular carcinoma. The overall excellent long term prognosis and a good patient outcome suggests that no additional surgery is necessary. Cancer 2001;91:505–24. © 2001 American Cancer Society.
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is conspicuous for its association with Alzheimer disease (AD) and as a cause of lobar hemorrhages in the elderly, but its role in cerebral infarction is less clear. There is evidence that CAA may also be a risk factor for ischemic infarction in AD. To further investigate CAA as a risk factor for infarction, we studied 108 cases of recent cerebral or cerebellar infarction diagnosed in tissue samples obtained from surgical material. There were 69 males and 39 females with a mean age of 52 yr (range 1-86). The majority of biopsies were obtained from the frontal and parietal lobes. Radiological studies demonstrated a lesion confined to a vascular distribution in 12 of the 17 (71%) cases examined. Microscopic sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin revealed complete, organizing infarction in 107 cases with areas of coagulative necrosis, anoxic-ischemic neuronal injury, inflammation, macrophages, vascular proliferation, gliosis, and swollen axons. One case showed an incomplete infarct. Most cases also exhibited a minor hemorrhagic component with hemosiderin and hematoidin pigments. CAA, defined as amyloid deposition in the walls of leptomeningeal and parenchymal arteries, was found by immunohistochemical stains for beta amyloid in 14 (13%) cases of complete cerebral infarct. Cortical beta amyloid plaques were found by immunohistochemistry in 19 (17%) cases. Cerebral or cerebellar tissues containing cortex and leptomeninges obtained from 136 patients with a mean age of 52 yr (range 1-85) during surgical procedures for diagnosis of primary or metastatic neoplasms and demyelinating lesions were used as age-matched controls. In this control group, CAA was found in 5 (3.7%) and beta amyloid plaques in 19 (14%). The results indicate that CAA, but not beta amyloid plaque formation, is significantly more common in patients with ischemic cerebral infarction than in age-matched controls with nonvascular lesions (odds ratio 3.8; 95% confidence interval 1.3-10.9; p < 0.01). Our results indicate that CAA is a risk factor for ischemic cerebral infarction in the population studied.
Carcinosarcoma is a malignant tumor having a mixture of carcinoma and sarcoma containing differentiated mesenchymal elements, such as malignant cartilage, bone, and skeletal muscle. These tumors have been linked histogenetically to pleomorphic carcinomas; it is unclear whether their clinical behavior is significantly different. To investigate this issue, we studied 66 cases of carcinosarcomas of the lung and compared them with cases from a previously published series of pleomorphic carcinomas. Carcinosarcomas show a male-to-female ratio of 7.25:1, with a mean and median age of 65 years. They most often present as solitary masses in the upper lobes and average 7 cm in diameter. Most (62%) were endobronchial or central tumors, whereas 38% were described as peripheral. The most frequent epithelial component was squamous cell carcinoma (46%), followed by adenocarcinoma (31%) and adenosquamous carcinoma (19%), whereas sarcomatous elements most frequently included rhabdomyosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, or combinations of these elements. Survival of patients with carcinosarcomas of lung was poor, with a 5-year survival rate of 21.3%. Of several clinical and pathologic parameters, only increased tumor size (with 6 cm as the optimal cutoff point) appeared to be related to reduced survival (p = 0.0195). In comparison with patients with pleomorphic carcinoma, patients with carcinosarcomas had no significant difference in the size of their tumors (p = 1.0), stage at presentation (p = 0.883), location in the lung (p = 0.073), or their overall survival (21.3% vs 15.0%) (p = 0.1038). A significantly greater proportion of patients with carcinosarcoma had squamous cell (p = 0.004) or adenosquamous (p = 0.016) carcinoma, whereas patients who had pleomorphic carcinoma showed a significantly greater frequency of adenocarcinoma (p = 0.029) and large cell carcinoma. The histologic differences between these two types of tumor suggest that they may be different entities with similar behavior, but additional studies are warranted to investigate this hypothesis.
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