Cholangiocarcinoma is a malignant neoplasm arising from the biliary epithelium that was first described by Durand-Fardel in 1840. Today, it continues to defy diagnosis and treatment. It is difficult to diagnose in part because of its relative rarity, and because it is clinically silent until it becomes advanced disease with obstructive symptoms. The worldwide incidence of cholangiocarcinoma has risen over the past three decades. There is marked geographic variability in the prevalence of this disease, due in large part to regional environmental risk factors. Surgical resection remains the only curative treatment, and high priorities are improving diagnostic methods, and clinical staging for resection once the disease is suspected. A recent trend towards aggressive surgical management has improved outcomes. Chemotherapy, palliative stenting, and radiation are reserved for patients who are not resectable, those with recurrence after surgery, and those who decline surgical intervention. Recent trials using combination systemic chemotherapy and neoadjuvant chemoradiation are promising, but require further study. Over the past five years, several important studies have yielded new insights into the molecular mechanisms of cholangiocarcinoma tumorigenesis. In this review we discuss epidemiology, etiologic factors, molecular pathogenesis, diagnosis, staging, and treatment of cholangiocarcinoma. Particular focus is on recent studies into the cellular and molecular pathogenesis of the disease, recent chemotherapy trials, and newer methods of staging and screening for this devastating malignancy.
Pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP) are stand-alone innate and adaptive immunomodulators and critical vaccine components. We present a strategy of sequential intratumoral (i.t.) and intramuscular (i.m.) injections of the stabilized dsRNA viral mimic and PAMP, polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid-polylysinecarboxymethylcellulose (poly-ICLC, Hiltonol; Oncovir). We report the first treated patient, a young man with an exceptionally advanced facial embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma with extension to the brain. After treatment, the patient showed tumor inflammation consistent with immunotherapy, followed by gradual, marked tumor regression, with extended survival. Sequential i.t. and i.m. poly-ICLC injections mimicking a viral infection can induce an effective, in situ, personalized systemic therapeutic "autovaccination" against tumor antigens of a patient. We postulate a three-step immunomodulatory process: (i) innate-immune local tumor killing induced by i.t. poly-ICLC; (ii) activation of dendritic cells with Th1 cell-and CTL-weighted priming against the released tumor antigens; and (iii) i.m. poly-ICLC maintenance of the systemic antitumor immune response via chemokine induction, facilitation of CTL killing through the induction of costimulators such as OX40, inflammasome activation, and increase in the T-effector/Treg ratio. These results support the use of certain simple and inexpensive i.t. PAMPs to favorably stimulate effective immunity against solid cancers. A phase II clinical trial testing the hypothesis presented has begun accrual (clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01984892).
Intramedullary spinal cord metastasis (ISCM) has been infrequently diagnosed during the clinical course of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). With the advent of more sensitive diagnostic procedures including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), more cases of ISCM have been documented. The management of these cases is particularly challenging as lack of prompt intervention often results in irreversible progressive neurological deficits. We describe the management and clinical course in six patients with RCC who developed ISCM. Two of these patients were treated surgically while four were treated with radiation therapy (RT). Although no major improvements in neurological function were noted, stabilizations were common. This prolonged their ability to live independently, a matter of utmost importance in these terminally ill patients.
Interdigitating dendritic cell sarcoma (IDCS) is an aggressive neoplasm of which fewer than 25 cases have been reported in the world literature. This malignancy is difficult to diagnose because of its rarity, and because of the subtle histopathologic features that distinguish IDCS from similar tumors arising from reticular cells. To date, there exists no consensus on a standard chemotherapeutic regimen for IDCS. Patients with this malignancy have been treated with chemotherapy regimens used against non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Responses to these regimens have been variable, but mostly unsuccessful. In this article we describe a case of IDCS occurring in a 44 year old female who presented with abdominal pain and inguinal adenopathy. Staging of the tumor with CT scan, PET scan, and bone marrow biopsy demonstrated inguinal and abdominal lymphadenopathies, a large mass encasing the small bowel, and extensive liver infiltration. Morphologic and cytochemical analysis of biopsies from the abdominal mass and inguinal node were consistent with a diagnosis of IDCS, and immunohistochemical stains of the lymph node were positive for CLA, Kp-1, S-100, while negative for CD1a, CD3, CD20, CKER, and HMB45. Treatment of this patient with ABVD chemotherapy resulted in rapid clinical improvement with a marked decrease in tumor burden after two cycles of ABVD, and a complete response after six cycles of therapy.
Lymphoma presenting with isolated diffuse infiltration of the skull is exceedingly rare, with less than 20 previously reported cases. The clinical presentation of a 73-year-old female with primary lymphoma of the skull, manifesting multiple cranial nerve palsies and infiltration of the temporalis muscles is described. MRI of the head, revealed an abnormal signal from the diploic space of the call varium and skull base on both T1 and T2 weighted images, infiltration of the temporalis muscles and clivus, and diffuse meningeal enhancement encroaching on the cavernous sinus bilaterally. Biopsy of temporalis muscle and skull showed a diffuse large cell lymphoma, B-cell type. Staging workup failed to reveal any other sites of disease. Despite multiple cranial nerve palsies, there was no evidence of leptomeningeal disease on CSF examination. MRI was instrumental in demonstrating the abnormalities that lead to the diagnostic biopsy.
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