This is the largest series of PJI by S. aureus managed with DAIR reported to date. The success rate was 55%. The use of rifampin may have contributed to homogenizing MSSA and MRSA prognoses, although the specific rifampin combinations may have had different efficacies.
Ovarian Sertoli cell tumors are rare, and their morphologic spectrum, behavior, and factors influencing the latter are not clearly established. They may be mimicked by many different tumors, some of them more frequent than Sertoli cell tumors; immunohistochemistry may aid in this differential, but its role has not been analyzed in a large series. We studied the clinicopathologic features of 54 Sertoli cell tumors, including the immunohistochemical profile of 23 of them. The patients, 6 of whom had Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, ranged from 2 to 76 years of age (mean, 30 years). Eleven patients had estrogenic and 4 had androgenic manifestations. The tumors ranged from 0.8 to 30 cm, with the majority being in the range of 4 to 12 cm. They were all unilateral, usually solid, and often yellow. The predominant microscopic pattern was tubular, seen, albeit often only focally, in all tumors; other patterns were cords or trabeculae (28), diffuse (21), pseudopapillary (4), retiform (3), islands or alveolar arrangements (3), and spindled (3). The tubules were solid or hollow with the former being somewhat more common. Delicate septa were occasionally seen and were conspicuous in areas of one tumor. The stroma was abundant in 15 tumors with marked sclerosis in 4. The cells usually had pale to occasionally densely eosinophilic cytoplasm, but 6 tumors were composed of cells with prominent foamy cytoplasm, falling in the category of "lipid-rich" Sertoli cell tumor, and one had cells with clear non-foamy cytoplasm. Forty-four tumors were stage I (42 of them were stage Ia and 2 were stage Ic), 1 was stage II, 3 were stage III, and 6 were not adequately staged. Follow-up was available for 27 patients with stage I tumors, and all were alive and well at last follow-up except for 2 patients with stage Ia and 1 with stage Ic disease. Those 3 patients had pelvic-abdominal recurrences 18, 36, and 9 months, respectively, after the initial diagnosis. Two of the three clinically malignant stage I tumors had moderate to severe cytologic atypia and brisk mitotic activity (>5 or more mitoses/10 high power fields [HPFs]), and one of these had tumor cell necrosis. Among the 10 clinically benign stage I tumors with more than 5 years of follow-up, only 3 had >5 mitoses/10 HPFs, but none had more than mild cytologic atypia and none had tumor cell necrosis. Two of the three patients with stage III disease had follow-up information and one was alive at 16 months and the second developed splenic metastases 2 years after the initial diagnosis. Two of the three stage III tumors had at least moderate cytologic atypia and brisk mitotic activity. Immunohistochemical stains showed positivity for AE1/3-Cam5.2 in 15 of 23 tumors; Epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) was negative in all the tumors. Inhibin was positive in 18 of 22 tumors, calretinin in 10 of 20, CD99 in 19 of 22, vimentin in 17 of 18, smooth muscle actin in 4 of 18, neuron specific enolase in 8 of 16, S-100 in 2 of 20, and chromogranin was negative in all 21 cases studied. Although Sertoli cell tumors...
Two types of endometrial carcinoma (EC) have been delineated on the basis of clinicopathologic studies. Low-grade endometrioid carcinoma (EEC) is the prototype of type I EC and is characterized by microsatellite instability and PTEN, K-ras, and/or β-catenin gene mutations, whereas type II EC is typically represented by serous and clear cell carcinomas (SCs/CCCs), the former frequently showing p53 mutations and c-erb-2 overexpression; however, the molecular profile of grade 3 EEC has not yet been well characterized. The goal of this study was to define the immunohistochemical and molecular profile of grade 3 EEC. We studied 25 patients with grade 3 EEC ranging in age from 35 to 87 (mean 61) years. At the time of initial diagnosis, 16 patients had stage I tumors, whereas 3, 5, and 1 had stages II, III, and IV tumors, respectively. Only 1 patient with stage IV tumor had disease in the peritoneum because of direct extend of tumor through the uterine wall. Two tissue microarrays were constructed from paraffin-embedded blocks and stained for MLH-1, MSH-2, p16, cyclin D1, C-erb-B2, WT-1, and p53. Loss of MLH-1 and MSH-2 was seen in 3 of 25 and 1 of 24 tumors, respectively; none showed loss of both. Diffuse p16 nuclear expression was found in 7 of 23 cases; diffuse and strong nuclear immunostaining for p53, cyclin D1, and Her-2 was seen in 9 of 24 neoplasms, 9 of 25, and 3 of 25 carcinomas, respectively. WT-1 was negative in all 25 tumors. One of the 3 grade 3 EECs with Her-2 overexpression showed gene amplification by fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis. No gene amplification for cyclin D1 was found. Follow-up information was available for all patients. Sixteen had stage I tumors. Of these patients, 11 were alive and well (AW), 3 died of disease (DOD), and 2 died of unrelated causes (DUC), with a mean follow-up time of 56 months (range, 24 to 96 mo); 2 of 3 patients with stage II tumors DOD, and 1 was AW with a mean follow-up time of 81 months (range, 6 to 66 mo); of the 5 patients with stage III tumors, 2 DOD, 1 was AW, 1 was alive with lung metastases, and 1 DUC [mean follow-up of 29 months (range, 12 to 74 mo)]; the only patient who had a stage IV tumor DOD 12 months later. Interestingly, patients with grade 3 EECs showing loss of MLH-1/MSH-2 had stage I tumors, and all were AW (60 to 84 mo). Seventy-seven percent (7 of 9) of patients with tumors showing cyclin D1 overexpression were stage I, and none died of disease, whereas 85% (6 of 7) of patients with p16-positive tumors were high stage (2 stage II, 3 stage III, and 1 stage IV), and 5 DOD. All but one of these patients had tumors that also had p53 overexpression. All 3 patients with Her-2 overexpression DOD (stages I, III, and IV). In conclusion, this study shows that grade 3 EEC shares with low-grade EEC the overexpression but not amplification of cyclin D1 and low frequency of Her-2 overexpression and amplification. Grade 3 EEC shares with SC the relatively common p53 and p16 overexpression and low frequency of loss of mismatch repair genes. However, in...
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