Mitotic count remains the best predictor of outcome following surgical resection of gastric GISTs. Ki67 immunohistochemistry does not provide better prognostication and p53, Bcl-2 and cyclin D1 immunohistochemistry provide no additional prognostication.
The majority of cases of intravascular lymphomatosis are B-cell lymphomas with only the occasional case being of T-cell type. We report a case of intravascular lymphomatosis in which the proliferating cells were of histiocytic type; the tumour has recurred following treatment.
Sarcomatoid/metaplastic carcinoma of the breast: a clinicopathological study of 12 cases Aims: To analyse the clinical and pathological features with long-term follow-up of a series of 12 cases of sarcomatoid carcinoma of the breast. Methods and results: The cases were selected from the surgical ®les of the Department of Pathology, University of Edinburgh, between 1977 and1988. The following clinical parameters were recorded: the age of the patients, size of tumour, presence or absence of lymph node or distant metastases, and patient survival. Pathological assessment included: the type of epithelial and mesenchymal components, the proportion of monophasic to biphasic tumours and the presence of adjacent in-situ carcinoma/atypical epithelial proliferation. The mean age of the patients was 61 years with a median of 64 and range 46±82 years. The mean size of the tumour was 52 mm (range 22±100 mm). None of the patients had distant metastasis at presentation and only one case had local lymph node metastasis which had a carcinomatous appearance. Five women were still alive after a minimum 12-year follow-up period. Four patients died of their disease (three with lung metastasis only and one with lung and bone metastases), one died of carcinoma of the cervix and two patients were lost to follow-up. Pathologically, four cases (33.3%) had no or almost undetectable epithelial structures by light microscopy, i.e.`monophasic sarcomatoid carcinoma'. The remaining cases revealed varying proportions of both epithelial and mesenchymal elements, i.e.`biphasic sarcomatoid carcinoma'. Of the epithelial component, six (50%) tumours had predominantly carcinoma of no special type, one lobular and one tubular carcinoma. The mesenchymal component was ®bromatosis/nodular fasciitis-like, malignant ®brous histiocytoma-like (MFH), osteosarcoma-like and ®brosarcoma-like in ®ve (42%), four (33%), two (17%) and one (8%) tumours, respectively. In 3/4 monophasic tumours, the mesenchymal component was of a low-grade ®bromatosis/nodular fasciitis type. In 6/12 (50%) of the cases there was associated in-situ atypical epithelial proliferation (®ve ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and one atypical ductal hyperplasia). Conclusions: From this small series it appears that sarcomatoid carcinoma is an uncommon tumour, which is large in size and tends to lack local or distant metastasis at presentation. Pathologists should be alert to the presence of the bland monophasic sarcomatoid carcinoma which has a pure mesenchymal appearance on light microscopy, but epithelial components demonstrated by cytokeratin immunohistochemistry. These showed metastases on long-term follow-up, similar to other histological patterns of sarcomatoid carcinoma.
BACKGROUNDA review of clinicopathologic features and outcome in women with carcinosarcoma of the ovary (also known as malignant mixed mesodermal tumor [MMMT]) compared with a group of women with serous adenocarcinoma (SAC) of the ovary was conducted.METHODSBetween 1984 and 2002, 1568 patients with epithelial ovarian carcinoma and 70 patients with ovarian carcinosarcoma underwent treatment at the Edinburgh Cancer Centre. Analysis was performed on 65 patients with MMMT, and 746 patients with SAC were selected as a group for comparison. Baseline variables were recorded prospectively and response to chemotherapy and progression‐free and cause‐specific survival between the groups were compared.RESULTSPatients with carcinosarcoma had a mean age of 66.6 years, which is significantly older than those with SAC (62.0 years) (P < 0.001). The objective response rate to platinum‐based chemotherapy was found to be significantly lower in patients with carcinosarcoma (25% vs. 60%; P = 0.02). Cause‐specific survival in the carcinosarcoma group was poor and significantly shorter than that observed in the SAC group (median survival of 8.2 months vs. 20.7 months; P < 0.0001). Progression‐free survival in patients with carcinosarcoma also was found to be significantly shorter compared with patients with SAC (median progression‐free survival of 6.4 months vs. 12.1 months; P < 0.001). Achieving optimal debulking at the time of initial surgery was found to be a highly significant factor in patients with carcinosarcoma with regard to determining outcome (median survival of 14.8 months for patients with optimally debulked International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics Stage III disease vs. 3.1 months for patients with suboptimally/nondebulked Stage III disease; P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONSOvarian carcinosarcoma is a distinct entity with a poor prognosis. Patients with carcinosarcoma differ from those with SAC with regard to having an older mean age of onset, an inferior response to platinum‐based chemotherapy, and worse progression‐free and cause‐specific survival. The extent of benefit from chemotherapy is unclear. Cancer 2004. © 2004 American Cancer Society.
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