A case of a glomus tumor originating from the lung is reported. A 43-year-old female had undergone resection of a right lung tumor following a clinical diagnosis of carcinoid, sclerosing hemangioma, or other sarcoma. Histologically, the tumor comprised uniform small round to oval cells with centrally located nucleus, a clear cytoplasm, and apparent cell borders. The tumor also showed a focally hemangiopericytomatous pattern with irregularly branching or dilated vessels. Electron microscopy revealed smooth muscle differentiation of the tumor cells. Immunostaining further revealed that the tumor cells expressed smooth muscle actin, h-caldesmon, muscle specific actin (HHF-35), but not cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, synaptophysin, or chromogranin A. Based on these findings, a diagnosis of primary pulmonary glomus tumor was established. Glomus tumors of the lung are very rare and only 21 cases have been reported to date. The histological features of the present tumor and the relevant literature are discussed.
The CADx system was able to analyse sufficient data for all types of epithelial proliferative lesions of the breast including invasive breast cancer. This system may be useful for pathological diagnosis of breast CNB in routine investigations.
The differential diagnosis of epithelial proliferative disease using core needle biopsy (CNB) is problematic because it is difficult to differentiate between intraductal papilloma, ductal hyperplasia, ductal carcinoma in situ, and invasive ductal carcinoma. Many studies have reported that breast cancer lesions are positive for neuroendocrine (NE) markers, whereas only a small number of studies have reported immunopositivity for NE markers in normal mammary tissues or benign lesions. We asked whether NE factors could be used as markers of breast cancer. We determined the immunopositivity rate of synaptophysin, an NE marker, in 204 lesions excised from the breast using CNB in patients who visited a universityaffiliated comprehensive medical facility and examined whether synaptophysin is a marker of breast cancer. The specimens were classified as synaptophysin-negative cases (56 benign, 99 malignant); equivocal cases (<1 %: 2 benign, 15 malignant); and synaptophysin-positive cases (1 benign, 31 malignant). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for malignancy of the lesions classified as synaptophysin positive were 23.3 %, 98.2 %, 96.9 %, and 36.1 %, respectively. The respective values for lesions classified as equivocal were 11.6 %, 96.6 %, 88.2 %, and 36.1 %. Synaptophysin may provide a marker of breast cancer diagnosed by CNB.
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