The article is concerned with incidence, clinical features, response to therapy, and prognosis of patients with hypocellular myelodysplastic syndromes. Bone marrow (BM) cellularity <30% (or <20% in patients >70 yr) was found in 24 of 236 (10.2%) trephine biopsies. Median age was 61 yr, with significant male predominance (M/F=3.0) At diagnosis, median hemoglobin was 83 g/L, median platelet and neutrofil counts were 31x109/L and 1.2x109/L, respectively. According to FAB classification, 17 patients had RA, 6 had RAEB, and only 1 had RAEB-t. Beside marrow hypoplasia, the most prominent PH finding was megakaryocyte hypoplasia and dysplasia, found in two-thirds of cases, each. Comparison between hypocellular and normo/hypercellular MDS cases regarding clinicopathological features showed younger age, more severe cytopenia, less blood and BM blast infiltration, MK hypoproliferation, and more pronounced stromal reactions in former cases. Karyotypic abnormalities were present in 12.5% hypocellular cases, in contrast to 44.6% normo/hypercellular cases (p=0.0025). Eleven patients were treated with supportive therapy alone, six with danazol or androgens, six with immunosuppressive therapy, and one with LDARAC. However, complete or partial response was achieved in only four patients treated with danazol or androgens. None of the patients developed leukemia. Eleven patients died, so marrow insufficiency was the main cause of death. Median survival was 33 mo for hypocellular MDS, and 19 mo for normo/hypercellular MDS (p=0.09). The results confirm the existence of hypocellular variant of MDS, which seems to have better prognosis than those patients with normo/hypercellular disease.
Conflicting data are reported on the clinical significance of cyclin D1 deregulation in multiple myeloma. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence and prognostic significance of cyclin D1 expression and p53 mutations in multiple myeloma, as well as the relationship of their expression with selected clinical data, histological features, and proliferative activity of myeloma cells. We analyzed bone marrow biopsy specimens obtained from 59 patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma. Expression of cyclin D1 and p53 was analyzed using standard immunohistochemical method of B5-fixed and routinely processed paraffin-embedded bone marrow specimens. Cyclin D1 was overexpressed in 14/59 (27%) and p53 in 5/59 (8.5%) specimens. There was no significant correlation between cyclin D1 overexpression and age, gender, clinical stage (Durie-Salmon classification), extent of osteolytic lesions, type of monoclonal protein, hemoglobin concentration, platelet count, serum concentration of creatinine, calcium, C-reactive protein, and beta2-microglobulin. No association was observed between the expression of cyclin D1 and the extent of bone marrow infiltration, histological grade, proliferative activity index (measured with Ki-67 immunoreactivity) and response to therapy. No significant difference was observed regarding overall survival between cyclin D1 positive and cyclin D1 negative patients (29 vs 36 mo, p = 0.76). Results of this study did not revealed prognostic significance of cyclin D1 overexpression in multiple myeloma. Mutations of p53 gene are rare events in myeloma, suggesting their limited role in the pathogenesis of the disease.
A primary mucosa associated lymphoid tissue tumor (MALT) of the kidney in a 50-year-old man who suffered from on therapy resistant high blood pressure over 15 years period is presented. A mass in the right kidney (6x5x3 cm) during routine check up was discovered on ultrasonography and confirmed on CT scan and NMR. The patient was submitted to nephrectomy. A mass involving kidney, pyelon and upper part of the ureter was found. Histology showed low grade non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphoma of MALT type. The neoplastic cells were positive for monoclonal antibodies CD20, CD79alpha, surface and cytoplasmic and IgM immunoglobulins and showed light chain restriction (kappa+). After histology was available, a careful staging was performed. The disease was not found anywhere else. It was concluded that the patient belonged to the stage IE of primary kidney MALT lymphoma. Gastroscopy showed signs of chronic superficial gastritis. Urease test was positive and IgG antibodies against Helicobacter pylori in titer 421 were found as well. Except for Helicobacter pylori no additional therapy was given.
The conflicting data are reported on the clinical significance of VEGF deregulation and intensity of angiogenesis in multiple myeloma. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence and prognostic significance of VEGF expression and microvessel density (MVD) in multiple myeloma, as well as the relationship of their expression with selected clinical data, histological features, and proliferative activity of myeloma cells. We analyzed bone marrow biopsy specimens obtained from 59 patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma. Expression of VEGF and MVD was analyzed using standard immunohistochemical method (antibodies against VEGF and CD34, respectively) on B5-fixed and routinely processed paraffin-embedded bone marrow specimens. MVD was estimated by counting the number of microvessels in three "hot spots" at 400x magnification. VEGF immunoreactivity was estimated on the basis of intensity and percentage of positive plasma cells. VEGF was expressed in 47/59 (79.7%) specimens. There was no significant correlation between VEGF overexpression and age, clinical stage, the extent of osteolytic lesions, type of monoclonal protein, hemoglobin concentration, platelet count, serum concentration of creatinine, calcium, and albumins, the extent of bone marrow infiltration, histological grade, and proliferative activity index (measured with Ki-67 immunoreactivity). No significant difference was observed regarding the overall survival between VEGF-positive and VEGF-negative patients (29 vs. 34 months, P = 0.8). Median MVD was 15, ranging from 1 to 89 microvessels per three "hot spots". There was significant correlation between MVD and histological grade, the extent of bone marrow infiltration, and proliferative activity. Significant difference was observed regarding the overall survival between patients with low MVD (<15) and patients with high MVD (> or = 15) (46 vs. 22 months, P = 0.009; univariate analysis). The results of this study did not reveal clinical significance of VEGF overexpression in multiple myeloma. On the contrary, the extent of bone marrow angiogenesis is an indicator of biological potency of malignant clone and a predictor of poor survival in newly diagnosed myeloma.
Carcinosarcomas are rare, malignant, biphasic tumors. We report the case of a 62-year-old man with gastric carcinosarcoma, along with its clinical, macroscopic and histopathological features. Macroscopically, a specimen of deformed stomach was obtained that measured 200 mm x 150 mm x 100 mm. A 150 mm x 100 mm x 50 mm exophytic tumoral mass (Borrmann type I) was found, which involved the posterior wall from the cardia to the antrum. Histopathologically, a mixed type of malignancy was revealed: an adenocarcinoma with intestinal metaplasia, with interposed fascicles of fusiform atypical cells and numerous large, rounded and oval cells. The tumor showed positive histochemistry for cytokeratin 18, epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, chromogranin A and vimentin. Liver metastases were diagnosed 8 mo postoperatively, and the patient died 4 mo later. A review of the available literature is also presented.
The results of this study showed that the dysregulation of apoptosis can appear on different places of apoptotic cascade in DLBCL. Apoptotic score is a more useful tool in predicting therapy response and OS of patients with DLBCL than single apoptotic parameters and along with IPI could help to identify a high-risk group of newly diagnosed nodal DLBCL.
In a retrospective study of 236 patients with primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), 130 cases (55.1%) revealed myelofibrosis in bone marrow biopsies. It was observed that fibrosis mostly occurs focally or patchy, and collagen deposits were found very rarely (only four patients). The histopathology of bone marrow biopsies revealed several differences between fibrotic and non-fibrotic MDS: cellularity is significantly higher, dysmegakaryopoiesis is more pronounced, plasmocytes and mast cells are more often increased, and disturbance of marrow topography (particularly of the MK- and G-line) can be found more frequently in MDS with myelofibrosis. Reticulin fibrosis occurred in all subtypes of MDS; however, there was a higher incidence in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. The frequency of abnormal growth of GM-progenitors was significantly higher in the MDS cases with myelofibrosis, compared to the cases without fibrosis. Clinical data showed significantly higher WBC, more frequent presence of immature granulocytes, and higher percentage of myeloblasts in peripheral blood and bone marrow in MDS with myelofibrosis compared to cases without myelofibrosis. Life expectancy was reduced to 13 mo, compared with 35 mo in MDS without fibrosis (p=0.00055). Time to leukemic transformation was 32 mo in MDS with fibrosis, compared with >56 mo in MDS without fibrosis (p=0.015). Myelofibrosis therefore seems to herald a poor prognosis.
The occurrence of Burkitt's-like lymphoma (BL) during pregnancy is rarely diagnosed and its outcome is poor. A case of BL localized in the uterus, ovaries and breast during the course of pregnancy is presented. The patient was treated with a combination of surgery and chemotherapy and was disease-free for 6 months after the diagnosis.
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