Metastatic Malignancies (metastatic + malignancy)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Carcinoma En Cuirasse Presenting as Keloids of the Chest

DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 2 2004
Kimberly Mullinax
Background. Carcinoma en cuirasse is a form of metastatic cutaneous breast malignancy occurring most commonly on the chest as a recurrence of breast cancer, but it can be the primary presentation. Objective. To discuss the clinical features of carcinoma en cuirasse that distinguish it from hypertrophic scars and keloids of the chest. Method. We report a 63-year-old woman with primary cutaneous breast carcinoma presenting as keloid nodules on the chest that failed treatments for keloids. Biopsy revealed a pattern of breast carcinoma in the skin. Results. After further workup, no tumor was found in the deep breast tissue, but metastases were found in her axillary lymph nodes. Conclusions. Unusual keloid-like nodules or scars on the chest that fail to respond to therapy may be primary or metastatic malignancies, and adequate histologic verification should be obtained to avoid delay in the proper treatment. [source]


Follicular thyroid carcinoma: metastasis to the sternum, 13 years after total thyroidectomy

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, Issue 11 2006
A. EROGLU
Summary Primary and metastatic malignancies of the sternum are uncommon. Secondary lesions to the sternum occur more commonly in patients with lung and breast cancer, and only a few cases of sternal metastasis arising from a follicular thyroid carcinoma have been reported in the literature. Rarely, metastases to the sternum present in the guise of primary sternal tumours may be treated surgically with that diagnosis in mind. We describe a case of a sternal mass treated by radical surgery, which ultimately proved to be a solitary metastasis from a follicular carcinoma of the thyroid, appearing 13 years after total thyroidectomy and radioactive iodine therapy. Late metastatic thyroid carcinoma to the sternum should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of sternal lesions. For patients with thyroid carcinoma and sternal metastasis, we recommend surgical resection of the metastasis, not only as a curative or palliative measure but also to maximise the effect of subsequent radioiodine treatment. [source]


The impact of major surgery on blood coagulation factors and thrombin generation,

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2007
McDonald K. Horne III
We studied the blood coagulation system of 14 patients with metastatic malignancies before and after they had undergone major surgery. In addition to measuring a battery of coagulation factors, we assessed the function of the system with assays of whole blood thrombin generation. With the exceptions of factor VIII (fVIII), which increased, and fibrinogen and fIX, which did not change, the activities of all the pro- and anticoagulant proteins were significantly lower postoperatively. However, the thrombin generating capacity of the system was relatively preserved. Although the integral of thrombin activity over time was lower after surgery, the mean peak thrombin concentration was unchanged and the time to clot formation was shortened. Similar changes could be reproduced by lowering the concentrations of pro- and anticoagulant factors together in control blood samples. Therefore, simultaneous reductions in pro- and anticoagulant proteins postoperatively worked to maintain the functional integrity of the blood coagulation system. Am. J. Hematol., 2007. Published 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Mesothelioma Symposium 11.30,12.30 Tuesday 16 September 2003

CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 2003
Darrel Whitaker Dr
The diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma on the cytology of serous effusions is a two-phase process. First is to determine that the effusion is malignant based on morphological features such as a highly cellular fluid with many large three dimensional cell aggregates, and/or the recognition of minor malignant criteria including prominent cell engulfment, uniformly present very prominent nucleoli, or the finding of very large (giant) cells. In cell block sections, strong positive staining with EMA often with cell membrane accentuation provides compelling support for a cytological diagnosis of malignancy. Second is to recognize that the malignant cells have a mesothelial phenotype and do not represent metastatic malignancy (usually adenocarcinoma). Criteria in support of mesothelioma include the lack of a ,two cell' population, that is one native (mesothelial) and one foreign (metastatic), cells with abundant dense staining cytoplasm, the presence of ,windows' where mesothelioma cells lie in close apposition and intracytoplasmic glycogen presenting either as small peripheral vacuoles on MGG stained smears or large yellow refractile crescents on Papanicolaou stained smears. In addition, mesothliomas often possess connective tissue stromal cores occurring as either well-formed collagen within papillary aggregates or lying free as pink (MGG) or light green (Pap) amorphous material in the background of the smear or in loose association with mesothelioma cells. Finally small orange staining squamous-like cells can occasionally be identified and sometimes this may be a very prominent finding and has resulted in the false impression of a squamous cell carcinoma. Almost certainly these cells represent apoptotic tumour cells. The connective tissue mucin hyaluronic acid may be found as a net-like pattern in the smear background or as large hard-edged magenta-stained vacuoles on MGG-stained smears. Cell block sections provide architectural information and it is usually possible to separate mesothelioma aggregates with their cuboidal cells, central nuclei and abundant dense cytoplasm arranged in solid, papillary or hollow clusters from those of adenocarcinoma with less dense, often foamy cytoplasm, often composed of columnar cells with elongated nuclei. Aggregate form in adenocarcinoma can be variable but true acini are a rare finding. These cell block sections provide an ideal medium for histochemistry (PAS with and without diastase digestion) and immunocytochemistry. By using a panel of antibodies (Calretinin and CK 5/6, BerEp4, CEA, B72.3) it is almost always possible to distinguish mesothelioma from metastatic adenocarcinoma. Calretinin and CK 5/6 positive staining and absent staining with BerEp4, CEA and B72.3 is considered diagnostic of mesothelioma. [source]


Death from Metastatic Donor-Derived Ovarian Cancer in a Male Kidney Transplant Recipient

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 2 2009
G. S. Lipshutz
Posttransplant malignancy developing in an allograft is an uncommon complication of organ transplantation. The tumor may represent malignant transformation of donor or recipient cells that were previously normal, metastatic malignancy of recipient origin or malignancy transmitted from organ donor to recipient. Establishing the origin of the malignancy is critical to treatment algorithms. It is generally believed allograft removal and immunosuppression withdrawal will lead to resolution of transmitted malignancies in cases where the renal allograft is the origin. We report a male patient who developed metastatic ovarian malignancy secondary to donor transmission. [source]