The genomic sequencing classifier demonstrates high sensitivity and accuracy for identifying benign nodules. Its 36% increase in specificity compared with the gene expression classifier potentially increases the number of patients with benign nodules who can safely avoid unnecessary diagnostic surgery.
The human hematopoietic progenitor cell antigen CD34 is synthesized and expressed by early normal hematopoietic progenitor cells and by many acute leukemias. Anti-CD34 antibodies also have been reported to stain blood vessels in tissue sections, and, more recently, CD34 mRNA has been detected in vascular endothelial cells. Therefore, the authors studied the diagnostic utility of immunohistochemical CD34 antigen detection in tumors of endothelial cell derivation and compared the results with stains for von Willebrand (vW) factor. A wide variety of epithelial and mesenchymal neoplasms also were examined to assess the specificity of CD34 for vascular neoplasia. Seven cases of angiosarcoma (seven of seven), five cases of Kaposi's sarcoma (five of five), and eight cases of epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (eight of eight) were moderately to strongly positive for CD34. This reactivity was equally intense in frozen sections, alcohol-fixed tissue, and formalin-fixed specimens. In many cases, the malignant endothelial cells stained more strongly than adjacent benign endothelium. Moreover, in most cases CD34 positivity was quantitatively and qualitatively stronger than staining for vW factor. Two cases of hemangiopericytoma (two of two) were CD34 positive but stained less intensely than the angiosarcomas, Kaposi's sarcomas, or hemangioendotheliomas. Five of six cases of hemangioma also stained positively for CD34; the nonreactive tumor in this group was the only one among 28 vascular neoplasms studied that was not reactive for CD34. In comparison, 9 of the 28 vascular tumors did not stain for vW factor. Three hundred fifty-seven tumors of nonvascular derivation also were examined for CD34 antigen expression. Focal light staining was seen in one pulmonary squamous cell carcinoma; moderate to intense staining was observed in half of the epithelioid sarcomas studied (8 of 16) and in a minority of leiomyosarcomas (3 of 22). These findings indicate that CD34 is a sensitive and relatively specific marker for neoplasms of vascular origin.
In this study a ribozyme (catalytic RNA) was designed to site specifically cleave the mRNA of the activated H-ras gene expressed in human bladder carcinoma EJ cells. The optimal conditions for catalytic cleavage by the ribozyme were demonstrated in vitro. A synthetic DNA encoding the ribozyme was cloned into a mammalian expression vector (pH beta APr-1) and transfected into EJ cells. The expressed ribozyme significantly altered the morphology and suppressed the growth of EJ cells in vitro. These cell lines were examined for their malignant potential in athymic (nude) mice by an orthotopic (transurethral) implantation model, which recapitulates the invasive potential of various bladder carcinomas. EJ tumors expressing the H-ras ribozyme were characterized by a marked reduction in tumor take and invasion compared to those formed by control EJ cells. These differences resulted in almost a twofold increase in survival of mice implanted with ribozyme-containing EJ cells. These results further elucidate the role of ras genes in tumorigenicity and invasion, as well as introduce ribozymes as a new class of anticancer agents.
The clinicopathological features and the prognostic significance of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) with trisomy 11 are currently unknown. In this study we describe 15 adult AML cases with trisomy 11. Trisomy 11 was the sole chromosomal anomaly in eight cases; the remaining seven cases were characterized by +11 in association with other karyotypic aberrations. Patients ages ranged from 34 to 79 years. 12 patients were male; three were female. Although there was no correlation of trisomy 11 with any specific FAB subgroup [M2 (n = 7), M1 (n = 5), M4/5 (n = 2), M3 (n = 1)] less mature forms predominated. Immunologically, the leukaemic blasts showed a strikingly consistent stem cell phenotype with expression of HLA-DR, CD34 and the myeloid antigens (CD15, CD33 and/or CD13). In addition, two cases expressed the B-cell associated antigen CD19. The presence of trilineage dysplasia, suggesting the presence of an underlying myelodysplasia (MDS), was observed at presentation in five cases; in another case MDS was evident at relapse only. Unexpectedly, MLL gene rearrangements were observed in two of four cases characterized by trisomy 11 as the sole karyotypic abnormality; however, MLL aberrations were not identified in three cases with trisomy 11 accompanied by other karyotypic anomalies. The majority of patients in each subgroup (i.e. those with and without additional cytogenetic abnormalities) achieved a short first complete remission (CR) (mean 8 months) and failed to obtain a second CR. Only one patient in each trisomy 11 subgroup is in a continuous CR for > 34 months. These findings suggest that trisomy 11 leukaemia is characterized by a stem/progenitor cell immunophenotype with poor response to standard chemotherapeutic regimens and an unfavourable prognosis.
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