A 59-year-old white man had generalized lymphadenopathy, fever, weight loss, and hypercalcemia. Histologic examination of seven lymph nodes from three different anatomic sites revealed a diffuse histiocytic infiltrate containing numerous typical Michaelis-Gutmann (MG) bodies. Histochemical and immunohistochemical results confirmed the histiocytic nature of the predominant cell within the infiltrate. Approximately equal numbers of residual normal B-cells, T-helper, and T-suppressor cells were present. Electron microscopy revealed extracellular and intracellular MG bodies, many of which were membrane-bound. Special stains, electron microscopy, and lymph node culture did not demonstrate microorganisms. The histologic features of the infiltrate were those of malacoplakia. However, the disease behaved like a lymphoma, with the occurrence of lymphadenopathy and a fatal outcome.
Serum samples were collected from 115 small-cell lung cancer patients before each course of chemotherapy and during follow-up. Levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) were measured and compared to the clinical assessments of the course of the disease, which were done by the responsible physician without knowledge of NSE-values. The predictive accuracy of an increase or decrease of NSE for a major response (CR + PR), SD or PD was 98%. Importantly no false-positive rises of NSE were observed. On the basis of this large number of data it seems justified to conclude that in common clinical practice the treatment of small-cell lung cancer patients can be monitored by serial measurements of NSE alone.
SUMMARY Values for alkaline phosphatase and gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP) and the prevalence of their elevation was significantly higher in 35 patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) than in 35 age and sex matched controls. The abnormal enzyme levels appeared to reflect a non-specific reation to inflammation and could thus aid in assessment of disease status.
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