Cutaneous squamous carcinoma with true glandular differentiation has only rarely been documented. Ten patients with such tumors are presented. There were six men and four women, aged 48 to 87 years. The tumors were located on the central face (eight), scalp (one), and hand (one) and consisted of minimally elevated, indurated, keratotic plaques, up to 6 cm in size. Microscopically, the neoplasms exhibited multifocal origin from the epidermis; deep, dispersed, infiltrative growth; perineural invasion; and stromal desmoplasia. Squamous differentiation was most marked superficially. Glandular differentiation was more obvious in deeper areas. Lumens typically developed within squamous nests and were often lined by cells with cytoplasmic vacuoles, some of which contained mucin. The neoplastic cells had obvious cytologic atypia and easily identified mitotic figures. Immunohistochemically, nine neoplasms studied contained carcinoembryonic antigen in glandular foci. Each patient had one or more surgical resections, and six also received radiation and/or chemotherapy. Five patients died with uncontrolled local recurrence, and two are alive with extensive disease and clinical evidence of regional lymph node involvement. Two individuals with small, superficial neoplasms that could be completely removed are disease free. One patient died of unrelated causes shortly after diagnosis. Cutaneous adenosquamous carcinoma is more aggressive than the usual carcinoma of the skin. It must be distinguished from the cytologically bland, microcystic adnexal (sclerosing sweat duct) carcinoma which is capable of recurring but rarely, if ever, proves fatal. The question of whether adenosquamous carcinoma is an epidermally derived squamous tumor with divergent differentiation or should be viewed as a newly recognized adnexal carcinoma remains to be resolved.
Background. Leuprolide, an agonist of luteinizing hormone‐releasing hormone (LH‐RH), and flutamide, an antiandrogen, increasingly are being used in the treatment of clinically localized prostate cancer. Only two small series (of 23 and 12 patients) have been published on the distinctive pathologic changes induced in the prostate by androgen deprivation therapy with discrepancies on the presence of squamous metaplasia, necrosis, and possible tumor destruction by combined androgen deprivation therapy. Methods. One hundred and thirteen radical prostatectomy specimens obtained after at least 3 months of leuprolide‐flutamide androgen inhibition therapy and 60 nonhormonally treated prostates in randomly selected clinical Stage T2 prostate adenocarcinoma patients were entirely sectioned. Distinctive histologic findings were tabulated and their statistical value determined. Results. Resection margins of excision were involved by tumor in 43% of untreated and in 19% of androgen‐deprived patients. Characteristic changes in androgen‐inhibited nontumor glands included atrophy, basal cell prominence, vacuolated luminal cell layer, and squamous and transitional cell metaplasia. Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) was observed in 35% of treated patients. The presence of small tumor glands separated by stroma was the most frequently noted effect of androgen deprivation on prostate adenocarcinoma; pyknosis and branching empty spaces were less frequent. Large clear tumor cells within an inflammatory response was a third histologic pattern. Apparently unaltered tumor areas were observed in 43% of prostates exposed to androgen deprivation therapy. Conclusions. Androgen deprivation therapy result in histologically distinctive changes that can be recognized in both nonneoplastic and neoplastic prostate tissue. Residual tumor was present in all 113 treated radical prostatectomy specimens. In addition to glandular shrinkage, therapy was associated with statistically significant reductions in the frequency of high grade PIN and extension of cancer to prostate specimen margins of excisions. Cancer 1995;75:1634‐41.
Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma (BSCC) of the head and neck is a recently described high-grade variant of squamous cell carcinoma. It is a biologically virulent neoplasm with a propensity for nodal, as well as systemic, metastases. Because of the limited number of published reports, we reviewed data from patients of the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center and identified 16 cases of BSCC. The intent of this study was to determine the role of radiotherapy in the treatment of BSCC and better define the clinical features of this entity. Radiotherapy alone, or in combination with surgery, resulted in excellent local control rates. Distant metastases, chiefly pulmonary, occurred in more than half of the patients.
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