Cases reported "Carcinoma, Papillary"

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1/5. Thyroid metastasis from intraductal papillary-mucinous carcinoma of the pancreas. A case report.

    BACKGROUND: Intraductal papillary-mucinous carcinoma (IPMC) of the pancreas is a newly identified clinicopathologic entity of the exocrine pancreas. It has been considered a slowly growing and less-aggressive carcinoma with a favorable prognosis. There have been only a few documents reporting its distant metastasis and cytologic features, with no report of thyroid metastasis until the present. CASE: A case of IPMC occurred in a 45-year-old male, who was admitted with rapid growth and tenderness of the thyroid. Abdominal computed tomography showed the typical cystic dilatation of IPMC with adjacent organ metastasis. Fine needle aspiration of the thyroid yielded papillary fronds of carcinoma cells with nuclear pleomorphism, abundant cytoplasm and prominent nucleoli in a mucinous background. Immunohistochemical findings from the skin and thyroid characterized the papillary-mucinous carcinoma as having originated in the pancreas. CONCLUSION: This case suggests that papillary carcinoma fronds aspirated from the thyroid should be further differentiated from the primary site and that a pleomorphic nucleus in a mucinous background is a useful feature to exclude a thyroid origin. Before this, distant metastasis of IPMC to the skin and thyroid has not been reported. The prognosis of IPMC with wide, distant metastasis at an advanced stage is poor.
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keywords = nucleus
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2/5. adult papillary renal tumor with oncocytic cells: clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and cytogenetic features of 10 cases.

    We report a series of 10 oncocytic renal papillary tumors, with the aim of determining their clinicopathologic features. All patients were male (median age, 71 years), treated by radical nephrectomy and free of recurrence or metastasis (median follow-up, 62 months). Tumors (median size, 3.3 cm) were intrarenal and well limited, with no extrarenal extension. They consisted of thin, nonfibrotic papillae lined by a single layer of oncocytic cells, with finely granular eosinophilic cytoplasm and round regular nucleus exhibiting central nucleolus (Fuhrman grade II, except for one grade III). Foci of necrosis were present in most cases. All tumors were immunoreactive for alpha-methylacyl-coenzyme a racemase, vimentin, and CD10; 4 expressed renal cell carcinoma antigen and 3 cytokeratin 7. There were a low number of cytogenetic changes in the 5 analyzed cases (median, 4; range, 1-7), with no trisomy 7 or 17. Papillary architecture, necrosis, and immunohistochemical profiles argued against the diagnosis of oncocytoma and suggested our cases to be part of the papillary renal cell carcinoma group. However, the cases were atypical for type 1 papillary carcinoma (due to oncocytic cells and absence of trisomy 17) and for type 2 (due to a good outcome). These results suggest that adult papillary renal tumors with oncocytic cells might be a distinct variant in the papillary renal cell carcinoma group.
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keywords = nucleus
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3/5. Human papillomavirus type 11DNA in papillary squamous cell lung carcinoma.

    We report a case of papillary squamous cell carcinoma of the lung developing in relation to a condylomatous papilloma and related to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The viral origin of the bronchial papillomatous lesion is strongly suggested by cytological and histological features with marked condylomatous changes. No viral capsid antigen was detected by immunohistochemistry. Transmission electron microscopy failed to reveal intranuclear viral-like particles in the papillary part of the carcinoma, but typical ultrastructural koilocytotic cells with irregular nucleus and coarse chromatin were observed. HPV dna type 11 was detected by in situ hybridization using biotinylated probes on paraffin-embedded specimens, under stringent conditions (Tm-12 degrees, 50% formamide). Papillary squamous cell carcinoma may result from the malignant conversion of benign squamous papilloma of the bronchus. HPV type 11 may be associated with malignant conversion of benign papilloma of the pulmonary tract, as in the upper respiratory tract. in situ hybridization with biotinylated probes is a relatively simple and appropriate method for retrospective analysis of HPV dna sequences in surgical specimens.
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keywords = nucleus
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4/5. Fine needle aspiration cytology of papillary endometrioid carcinoma of the prostate. The grooved nucleus as a cytologic marker.

    The fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytologic findings of an endometrioid carcinoma of the prostate are presented, along with the histologic, immunohistochemical and endoscopic features. cystoscopy of an elderly male patient with hematuria and symptoms of bladder outlet obstruction showed the delicate papillary growths at the verumontanum that are characteristic of this lesion. Transrectal FNA of the prostate produced samples that included clusters of malignant cells with crowding and overlapping of hyperchromatic nuclei containing prominent nucleoli and a loss of polarization and cohesion. Many of the groups of tumor cells suggested papillary structures. A novel finding in the aspirate was a grooved nucleus in 10% of the tumor cells. Immunohistochemical staining of biopsy sections of the papillary growths for prostate-specific antigen was strongly positive. It is important to recognize this variant of prostatic carcinoma since its behavior and response to therapy are not yet established.
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ranking = 5
keywords = nucleus
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5/5. Papillary carcinoma of the thyroid, oxyphil cell type, "clear cell" variant: a light- and electron-microscopic study.

    A unique case of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid having the combined features of three morphological subtypes--tall cell, clear cell and Hurthle cell--has been studied by light and electron microscopy. The distinctive neoplastic cells had an oxyphilic basal zone, a mid-placed nucleus and a clear apical region. Ultrastructurally, the cytoplasm was virtually filled with mitochondria, characteristic of Hurthle cells, but the unusual finding was the marked distention and emptiness of those mitochondria located in the apical zone, accounting for the clear phenomenon noted by light microscopy. In contrast, the mitochondria in the basal, or oxyphilic, part of the cells were intact. While a few cases of clear cell and papillary clear-cell carcinoma of the thyroid have been studied by electron microscopy previously, the clear change has never been attributed to dilated mitochondria, but rather to the presence of glycogen. The reason for the mitochondrial swelling is not answered, but it is probably an in vivo effect. Some of the other characteristics of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid described previously, such as microvilli, absence of colloid, infolded nuclei and nuclear bodies, were also present in this case. However, ground-glass nuclei, a frequently reported feature, were not found.
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ranking = 1
keywords = nucleus
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