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Ductal Differentiation (ductal + differentiation)
Selected AbstractsSarcomatoid eccrine porocarcinoma: report of two cases and a review of the literatureJOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2007Seng Geok Nicholas Goh To the best of our knowledge, there has been no report in the English literature of porocarcinoma with predominantly undifferentiated sarcomatous change. We present two cases of sarcomatoid eccrine porocarcinoma associated with a benign poroma. Case 1 pertained to an 82-year-old woman with an ulcerated chest wall tumor, and Case 2 was that of a 74-year-old woman who presented with an ulcerated plaque in the lower leg. Case 1 showed an unusual pseudo-angiosarcomatous morphology with spindle cells dissecting through collagen bundles and forming vascular like channels. Case 2 revealed high-grade malignant spindle cells with focal evidence of ductal differentiation. In both the cases, benign poromatous elements were histologically evident. Immunohistochemistry performed showed pancytokeratin positivity in spindle cells of both lesions. Epithelial membrane antigen and carcino-embryonic antigen positivity in the malignant ductal elements and focal smooth muscle actin staining of the spindle cells were demonstrated in Case 2. A brief review of relevant literature is presented. [source] Cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms: clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 20 cases suggesting a continuous spectrum ranging from benign mixed tumor of the skin to cutaneous myoepithelioma and myoepithelial carcinomaJOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, Issue 5 2003Thomas Mentzel Background:, Myoepithelial neoplasms, both benign and malignant, are rare but well-established clinicopathologic entities in the salivary glands, the breast, and the lung. Despite similarities between cutaneous sweat glands and glandular structures in the above-mentioned organs as well as the presence of regular myoepithelial cells around cutaneous eccrine/apocrine glands, the concept of cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms is still debatable and not commonly accepted. Methods:, Twenty cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms have been studied histologically and immunohistochemically. Results:, Nine neoplasms showed features of benign mixed tumor of the skin (chondroid syringoma) (five females and four males, age range 19,65 years, all cases arose in the head and neck region). Two cases represented the eccrine and seven the apocrine subtype. Interestingly, in three cases of the apocrine subtype, solid areas composed predominantly of myoepithelial cells were detected; these neoplasms were designated as benign mixed tumors with prominent myoepithelial cells. Nine cutaneous neoplasms were composed of spindled, epithelioid, and plasmocytoid cells without ductal differentiation and immunohistochemically stained variably positive for vimentin, epithelial and myogenic markers, S-100 protein, calponin, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (four females and five males, age range 3,71 years, four cases arose in the head and neck region and one case each on the finger, the thigh, the lower leg, the foot, and the breast, respectively); these neoplasms were designated as cutaneous myoepitheliomas. Two morphologically malignant neoplasms with cytologic and immunohistochemical features of myoepithelial cells arose on the face of a 70-year-old female and a 79-year-old male patient; these neoplasms were designated as malignant cutaneous myoepitheliomas (cutaneous myoepithelial carcinomas). Conclusions:, The study suggests a continuous spectrum of cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms ranging from benign mixed tumor of the skin to cutaneous myoepithelioma and cutaneous myoepithelial carcinoma. Further studies with extended follow-up information are necessary to establish prognostic factors. [source] Benign myoepithelioma of the breast: Origin and developmentPATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 6 2009Hajime Hikino A case of benign myoepithelioma of the breast in a 55-year-old woman is described. The tumor was a well-circumscribed solid mass, measuring 13 × 12 mm. Histopathology indicated that the tumor was composed of entirely myoepithelial cells, which was confirmed by immunoreactivity to calponin and S-100. There was no ductal differentiation in the tumor, and staining for pan-cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen was weak and negative, respectively. Although the biological behavior of the tumor remains to be ascertained, the tumor was considered to be myoepithelioma with benign features due to mild nuclear pleomorphism, sparse mitotic figures, low Ki-67 labeling index and low S-phase fraction. Diagnostic confusion between benign myoepithelioma and other myoepithelial-rich cell tumors is possible. Considering the classification of myoepithelial tumor in the salivary glands, benign myoepithelioma of the breast may possess a different development process from adenomyoepithelioma. [source] Ductal Eccrine Carcinoma Presenting as a Paget's Disease-Like Lesion of the BreastTHE BREAST JOURNAL, Issue 5 2001Byeong-Woo Park MD Some types of skin appendage tumors, particularly ductal eccrine carcinomas (DEC), imitate breast carcinomas histologically, thus causing great diagnostic challenges. We describe a case of DEC presenting as an eczematous, crusted skin lesion on the right nipple-areolar complex in a 67-year-old woman. A skin biopsy done under the clinical impression of Paget's disease of the nipple was initially misinterpreted as infiltrating ductal carcinoma, and a subsequent modified radical mastectomy revealed DEC exclusively confined to the nipple with perinodal tumor metastasis in one of the axillary lymph nodes. This case highlights the diagnostic difficulty caused by the histologic homology between breast carcinomas and skin appendage tumors with ductal differentiation. [source] |