The recurrence risk of 'pushing' eccrine porocarcinoma is significantly lower than for 'infiltrative' eccrine porocarcinoma. Based on these considerations, a decisional algorithm might be proposed: first step, excisional biopsy of the primary eccrine porocarcinoma and identification of the histological subtype; second step, infiltrative or pagetoid porocarcinoma should be excised with an additional modified micrographic Mohs procedure, while no additional surgery is needed for 'pushing' eccrine porocarcinoma if the first excisional biopsy is complete. Although demonstrated in a limited case series, the histological subtype might guide the surgical management of primary eccrine porocarcinoma.
Celiac disease (CD) is characterized by villous atrophy and an increase in intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL). The IEL usually exhibit a suppressor/cytotoxic phenotype (CD3 and CD8) and display a polyclonal profile for T-cell receptor (TCR) rearrangement as opposed to the monoclonality of refractory CD (RCD) with CD8 IEL. A complication of CD is the loss of response to a gluten-free diet called RCD that may progress to an enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma. We reviewed 20 uncomplicated CD and 23 complicated CD (19 RCD and 4 diagnosed at the same time as enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma). In complicated CD, the IEL phenotype was CD8 in 9 cases and CD8 in 14 cases. In 100% of cases, IEL showed a monoclonal TCR rearrangement. All the 9 CD8 complicated CD exhibited a monoclonal TCR rearrangement and 3 of them were associated with a T-cell lymphoma (2 at the same time as CD and 1 after 43-mo follow-up) and bore the same monoclonal rearrangement in IEL and in lymphoma. Interestingly, the 13 cases (100%) of CD with a CD8 phenotype were also found monoclonal and 2 of them were associated with a T-cell lymphoma diagnosed at the same time as CD and exhibiting the same rearrangement in IEL and in lymphoma. An aberrant CD3 CD8 IEL phenotype is a good criterion for RCD diagnosis. However, cases with a normal CD3 CD8 IEL phenotype may correspond to RCD. In such cases, we suggest that molecular analysis of TCR-gamma genes is a useful method for identifying cases with RCD.
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