TAE/TACE are beneficial treatments for control of symptoms as well as tumor growth, with acceptable morbidity and mortality rates. No significant efficacy and survival differences were shown between TAE and TACE. Posttreatment CgA levels and the concurrent use of SSAs were independently associated with survival.
Most gastric neuroendocrine tumours are well differentiated and considered as neuroendocrine neoplasms, whilst poorly differentiated lesions are considered as neuroendocrine carcinomas and account for only 6–16% of gastric neuroendocrine tumours. Gastric mixed adenoneuroendocrine carcinomas are rare malignancies usually composed of a neuroendocrine carcinoma and an adenocarcinoma with a variable grade of differentiation. Here, we report an unusual and rare gastric mixed adenoneuroendocrine carcinoma with a trilineage cell differentiation including a neuroendocrine carcinoma, an adenocarcinoma and a squamous cell carcinoma. A brief discussion of the histopathological features, biological behaviour and treatment of this rare tumour type is presented.
The treatment of chronic type B aortic dissections remains challenging and controversial. Currently most centers advocate open or endovascular intervention for patients with evidence of malperfusion, rupture or impending rupture, continued pain, or aneurysm formation. Regardless of the type of intervention, the incidence of complications or death remains high, even when undertaken in an elective setting. The standard endovascular treatment usually involves placement of a stent graft into the true lumen of the dissection in an effort to exclude the false lumen. This case report describes the placement of a branched stent graft into the false lumen of a patient with chronic type B dissection to encourage exclusion and thrombosis of the true lumen whilst maintaining flow to all visceral vessels.
BackgroundSystemic sclerosis (SSc) is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease characterised by vascular dysfunction and damage, excess collagen deposition and subsequent organ manifestations. Vasculopathy is an early feature of the disease which leads to a chronic hypoxic environment in the tissues. Paradoxically, there is a lack of angiogenesis. We hypothesised that this may in part be due to a nonphysiological, overriding upregulation in antiangiogenic factors produced by the hypoxic tissues. We considered thrombospondin 1 (TSP-1) as a candidate antiangiogenic factor.ResultsConditioned media from human microvascular endothelial cells cultured in both normoxic and hypoxic environments were able to block endothelial cell proliferation, with the latter environment having a more profound effect. Filtration to remove > 100-kDa proteins or heparin-binding proteins from the conditioned media eliminated their antiproliferative effect. TSP-1 was expressed in high concentrations in the hypoxic media, as was vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Depletion of TSP-1 from the media by immunoprecipitation reduced the antiproliferative effect. We then show that, in a dose-dependent fashion, recombinant TSP-1 blocks the proliferation of endothelial cells. Immunohistochemistry of skin biopsy material revealed that TSP-1 expression was significantly higher throughout the skin of patients with SSc compared with healthy controls.ConclusionsDespite the environment of chronic tissue hypoxia in SSc, there is a paradoxical absence of angiogenesis. This is thought to be due in part to aberrant expression of antiangiogenic factors, including TSP-1. We have demonstrated that TSP-1 is released in high concentrations by hypoxic endothelial cells. The conditioned media from these cells is able to block proliferation and induce apoptosis in microvascular endothelial cells, an effect that is reduced when TSP-1 is immunoprecipitated out. Further, we have shown that recombinant TSP-1 is able to block proliferation and induce apoptosis at concentrations consistent with those found in the plasma of patients with SSc and that its effect occurs in the presence of elevated VEGF levels. Taken together, these data are consistent with a model wherein injured microvascular cells in SSc fail to repair because of dysregulated induction of TSP-1 in the hypoxic tissues.
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