These case reports and review provide important diagnostic and management considerations for primary BCC and MBCC. Early intervention with aggressive treatment measures may improve the prognosis and survival of MBCC patients.
We describe a 42-year-old woman with histologically confirmed lobomycosis, a cutaneous fungal infection rarely reported outside of Latin America. Our case represents the first published report of imported human lobomycosis in Canada and the fifth in an industrialized country.
These case reports and review provide important diagnostic and management considerations for primary BCC and MBCC. Early intervention with aggressive treatment measures may improve the prognosis and survival of MBCC patients.
Although trichoepitheliomas (TEs) are commonly regarded as benign tumors of follicular origin, the natural history of multiple familial trichoepitheliomas (MFT) and their risk for malignancy has been unclear. We describe a 57-year-old male with numerous skin-colored firm papules and plaques present on the central face since 6 years of age. Recently, some lesions had enlarged and ulcerated. Other family members were similarly affected. Biopsies from multiple lesions showed TEs both alone and associated with basal cell carcinoma (BCC) in the same section, suggesting the secondary development of BCCs within TEs. Many prior reports of BCCs arising within TEs in patients with presumed MFT were likely misdiagnosed cases of nevoid BCC. This report is a compelling example of MFT in which BCCs evolved secondarily. Awareness of the potential for the evolution of carcinoma in patients with MFT is important in the management of these patients.
Anetoderma is circumscribed atrophy of the skin due to a localized deficiency in elastic tissue. It can follow inflammatory skin diseases of several types, and occasionally is present in the skin around neoplasms. There are a few reports of anetoderma in the lesional skin of cutaneous lymphoma. We report on two patients who presented with multiple lesions of anetoderma and who later proved to have low-grade cutaneous B-cell lymphomas. One patient (Patient 1) is a 39-year-old man and the other patient is a 26-year-old woman who is a renal transplant recipient (Patient 2). Some biopsy specimens from the anetodermic skin of Patient 1 appeared to show an urticarial reaction, although plasma cells were present. A large nodule showed lymphoid follicles surrounded by plasmacytoid lymphocytes, with loss of elastic tissue in the adjacent dermis. The plasmacytoid cells stained overwhelmingly for lambda light chain, and staining of the urticarial lesions from this patient also showed a marked majority of lambda positive cells. Immunoglobulin heavy chain gene (IgH) rearrangements showed a dominant clonal pattern in the nodular lesion. We classified the disease in Patient 1 as marginal zone lymphoma and the disease in Patient 2 as a post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder. Because of the intimate association of anetoderma and cutaneous B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders in these two patients, it seems possible that anetoderma could result from either a local effect of the neoplastic cells or associated inflammatory cells, especially neutrophils as in Case 1. The infiltrates of Case 1 had many interstitial neutrophils and only a few clonal plasmacytoid lymphocytes, indicating that this presentation of B-cell lymphoma can be a diagnostic pitfall. Given these two cases and similar ones in the literature, biopsy of lesional skin in anetoderma should be performed to ensure that lymphomatous infiltrates are not present. Even if plasma cells are sparse, studies to detect clonality are appropriate. Cutaneous B-cell lymphoma can be added to the list of associations of elastolysis and cutaneous lymphoma, which includes granulomatous slack skin (T-cell lymphoma) and cutis laxa (myeloma).
The Problem Although there is a surge in research on Talent management and talent development (hence forward TMD) practices across different regions, most of what we know about these topics in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is based on government and practitioners’ reports. Nowadays, UAE is going through unprecedented times of growth. Organizations are operating in a diverse environment created by a smart government vision and practical policies that allowed the UAE to be labeled as a talent magnet destination. Still, TMD activities seem to be influenced by a two-tier system, one for Emirati nationals and another for expatriates. The question is whether the UAE is able to continue its growth through current TMD practices or whether a more strategic approach is needed to address the current TMD challenges and to meet the needs of individuals and of organizations. The Solution The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of professionals’ perspectives in different sectors about (a) the government policies, (b) current activities, and (c) challenges and contextual factors that affect the current state of TMD in the country. Once we understand the different policies, activities, and challenges, practitioners and leaders can use TMD as a source of power, or a strategy, that can lead people and organizations into success. The Stakeholders Human resources and organization development experts working in international contexts, administrators in academic institutions, and leaders in government organizations interested in HRD in the context of the UAE, will find the information presented in this study useful.
This case report details an 85-year-old woman who presented with mycosis fungoides (MF), clinical stage 1A. Bilateral lesions on the upper thighs were responsive to topical steroid therapy. Biopsies showed band-like dermal infiltrates of medium-sized lymphocytes with marked epidermotropism, including large intraepidermal lymphocytes with nuclear convolutions, consistent with MF. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that the lesional cells were CD56+, but unlike the case in previous reports of CD56+ MF, they also expressed CD4 and T-cell intracellular antigen 1 and did not express CD8. To our knowledge, this is the first description of a case of MF with a CD4+, CD8-, CD56+, T-cell intracellular antigen 1-positive immunophenotype. At 85 years of age, the patient is older than all previously described patients with CD56+ MF. Despite an immunophenotype observed more commonly in aggressive forms of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, the clinical presentation is that of typical MF. The patient presented with limited disease and after 12 months of follow-up has not progressed beyond stage 1A.
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