Twenty-eight HIV patients either naive or failing highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)with moderate-advanced Kaposi's sarcoma (KS)were randomly chosen to initiate a new HAART regimen plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin(PLD) or the new HAART regimen alone. After 48 weeks, better response rates were observed in the HAART plus PLD group (76% versus 20%). In HIV-infected patients with moderate-advanced KS, HAART alone may not be enough for KS response.
'Buffalo hump' adipose tissue shows specific disturbances in gene expression with respect to subcutaneous fat from HIV-1-infected/HAART-treated patients. Mitochondrial alterations cannot explain the differential behavior of 'buffalo hump' with respect to adipose depots prone to lipoatrophy. The absence of a local inflammatory status in 'buffalo hump' may explain in part the differential behavior of this adipose tissue.
Treatment of KS with PLD in HIV-infected patients is followed by a low relapse rate, with most relapses occurring during the first year after stopping chemotherapy. However, the mortality rate in this population was high, in part because of an unexpectedly high incidence of other tumors, mainly lymphomas.
Brooke-Spiegler syndrome (BSS) is an autosomal dominantly inherited disease characterized by the development of multiple trichoepitheliomas and cylindromas. Other lesions have been reported to occur in patients with BSS, including parotid basal cell adenomas, milia, organoid nevi, basal cell carcinomas, and spiradenomas. Spiradenomas and cylindromas have so many features in common that they have been regarded as polar extremes belonging to a spectrum of cutaneous adnexal neoplasms. We report on a 61-year-old woman with multiple spiradenomas on the scalp and periauricular areas and her 28-year-old daughter, with multiple facial trichoepitheliomas. Occasional features of pilar and ductal differentiation were found in tissue specimens of tumors from the mother and daughter, respectively. Co-existence of multiple spiradenomas and trichoepitheliomas and segregation of the predominant type of tumor in different members of a family with BSS have been reported occasionally, but never, to our knowledge, in combination. The presence of mixed differentiation in tumor specimens from both patients provides additional evidence in support of the folliculosebaceous apocrine unit (FSAU) hypothesis. Mutations in genes regulating proliferation and differentiation of putative stem cells of the FSAU would give rise to different combinations of adnexal skin tumors as well as to other neoplasms.
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