Cases reported "Pleural Neoplasms"

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1/9. Presence of human herpesvirus 8 dna sequences in renal transplantation-associated pleural Kaposi sarcoma.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe one case of symptomatic skin and pleural Kaposi sarcoma (KS) associated with kidney transplantation. diagnosis was supported by morphologic study and human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) detection in both tissues. Pulmonary involvement was not present. DESIGN: The presence of HHV-8 dna sequences was proved using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), Southern blot hybridization, and in situ hybridization. SETTING: Human herpesvirus 8 is found in most KS from patients with and without the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Clinically significant pulmonary infiltration by KS is diagnosed uncommonly antemortem, and pleural disease is exceptional. PATIENT: A 49-year-old man who had renal transplant with immunosuppressive therapy (tacrolimus and prednisone) and developed a cutaneous KS. A pleural effusion appeared without pulmonary involvement. Both lesions disappeared when immunosuppressive drugs were suspended. Later, the pleural effusion and the cutaneous lesions reappeared. Pleural biopsy specimens showed KS infiltration. OUTCOME: The patient refused treatment and was lost to follow-up. RESULTS: The skin and pleural biopsies showed a proliferation of spindle-shaped cells positive for CD34. The HHV-8 sequences were detected by nested PCR. No amplification was detected in uninvolved skin from the patient or in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 10 healthy individuals used as controls. The Southern blot hybridization confirmed these results. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first report of HHV-8 in symptomatic pleural KS, which was probably associated with immunosuppression after kidney transplantation. The demonstration of HHV-8 dna in biopsy material in the appropriate cells could be diagnostic when the morphologic setting is consistent with KS.
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2/9. Benign solitary fibrous pleural tumour. Evidence of primitive features and complex genomic imbalances, including loss of 20q.

    AIMS: Cytogenetic data on solitary fibrous tumours (SFT) are very limited. We studied a benign pleural SFT for its ultrastructural and immunohistochemical details, and made cytogenetic analyses for comparison with other genetic and ultrastructural studies of SFT. RESULTS: immunohistochemistry showed strong positivities for CD34 and vimentin, but no reactions with anti-cytokeratins and epithelial membrane antigens. Electron microscopy revealed primitive desmosomes in our SFT. The results thus evinced fibroblast-like cells with intermediate epithelial-mesenchymal character. comparative genomic hybridization of the tumour revealed losses of 1p33-->pter, 17pter q21, entire copies of chromosomes 19 and 22, and gains of 1p21-p22, 2q23-q32.3, 3pl2-q13.2, 4p14-q28, 6p12-q21, 9p21-->pter and 13q21-q31. Furthermore, there was loss of 20q, as was previously reported elsewhere in a case of benign and a case of malignant SFT. CONCLUSIONS: The results furnish further evidence of the involvement of -20q in SFT. In addition, they show that SFT may have complex genomic imbalances and primitive features, despite having a benign appearance.
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3/9. Synovial sarcoma of the pleura: a clinical and pathologic study of three cases.

    Synovial sarcomas are rare soft tissue malignancies that most commonly affect the extremities in the vicinity of large joints. These malignancies typically occur in adolescents and young adults between the ages of 15 and 40 years.(1,2) Historically they are believed to originate from primitive pluripotent mesenchyme capable of synovial differentiation. This belief is consistent with the malignancy's origin from sites devoid of normal synovium, such as the pleural cavity. A variety of pleural cavity sarcomas have been described, including liposarcoma,(3) chondrosarcoma,(4) osteosarcoma,(5) and malignant schwannoma.(6) Pleural synovial sarcoma, however, is a much rarer entity. In fact, pleural synovial sarcoma was first described only 6 years ago(7) and has not yet been reported in the surgical literature. Because of its rarity, pleural synovial sarcoma is often mistaken for the histologically similar malignant mesothelioma, the most common of the pleural neoplasms. This is a critical distinction, because synovial sarcoma may be extremely aggressive. Studies in the last 10 years have shown it to be extremely sensitive to ifosfamide-based chemotherapy, and survival of patients with synovial sarcoma has recently increased with chemotherapy, with 5-year survivals now as high as 57%.(8-10) In this report, we describe 3 cases of synovial sarcoma of the pleura. Clinical findings are correlated with pathologic features, including immunohistochemical stains and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for the identification of the diagnostic chromosomal translocation, t(X;18)(p11.2;q11.2). This delineation of the clinical and pathologic aspects of this rare, newly recognized tumor should increase awareness among the surgical community.
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4/9. Primary pleural synovial sarcoma. A case report and review of the literature.

    Synovial sarcoma (SS) is an uncommon soft tissue tumor that occurs primarily in the extremities of young adults, especially in the periarticular region. In this report, we describe the rare occurrence of primary SS of the pleura in a 15-year-old boy. Histologically, the tumor demonstrated monophasic morphologic findings and showed positive staining with vimentin and Bcl-2 and focally for cytokeratin CK7. Fluorescent in situ hybridization identified t(X;18) translocation. The patient developed recurrences 20 months following resection of the tumor. The literature on this uncommon entity is reviewed, and its histogenesis, differential diagnoses, and cytologic features are also discussed.
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5/9. Pyothorax-associated lymphoma (PAL): a western case with marked angiocentricity and review of the literature.

    AIMS: To report a case of pyothorax-associated lymphoma in a non-immunocompromised 78-year-old man with a 45-year history of tuberculous pleuritis and left pleural effusion. Pyothorax-associated lymphoma is a high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma occurring in 2% of patients with long-standing tuberculous pleuritis and pyothorax. Pyothorax-associated lymphoma is frequently Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated, mainly reported in japan but exceedingly rare in western countries. methods AND RESULTS: histology revealed a high-grade, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with immunoblastic and plasmacytoid features and marked angiocentricity with focal destruction of the vessel walls. immunohistochemistry revealed a post germinal B-cell phenotype. rna in-situ hybridization and molecular analysis showed a latent EBV infection and absence of human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8). CONCLUSIONS: Pyothorax-associated lymphoma represents a rare but distinctive type of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, with characteristic clinico-epidemiological, immunohistological, and biological features.
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6/9. comparative genomic hybridization analysis of a pleuropulmonary blastoma.

    Pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB) is a rare, aggressive dysontogenetic tumor of childhood. We report the comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) study performed on a case of PPB in a 3-year-old-boy. The tumor was characterized by several chromosomal imbalances. Gains observed affected regions: 1q12-q23, 3q23-qter, 8pter-q24.1, 9p13-q21, 17p12-p11, 17q11-q22, 17q23-q25, 19pter-p11, and 19q11-q13.3. Whole chromosome gains were detected at 2 and 7. Loss of genetic material was found at regions: 6q13-qter, 10pter-p13, 10q22-qter, and 20p13. To our knowledge, there have been no CGH reports on PPB, but it is interesting to note that 1) the alterations found confirm previous cytogenetic reports describing gains of chromosomes 2 and 8 as recurrent abnormalities in this type of tumor, suggesting that a gene or genes of putative relevance in PPB pathogenesis are mapped at 8p11-p12, and 2) the CGH profile of this case is very similar to those observed in embryonal rhabdomyosarcomas, in which gains of 2 or 2q, 7 or 7q, and 8 or 8p and loss of 10q22-qter are consistently found. This finding supports the hypothesis that PPB may be tumorigenetically related with embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma.
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7/9. Identification of a ring chromosome with spectral karyotyping in a pleural synovial sarcoma.

    The origin of a ring chromosome in a monophasic synovial sarcoma of the diaphragmatic pleura of an 18-year-old man was investigated using spectral karyotyping (SKY) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Conventional cytogenetic analysis revealed the following clonal karyotypic abnormalities: 47,Y,t(X;18)(p11.2;q11.2),t(11;19)(q12;q13.4), 12,-13, r[6]. The SYT-SSX1 fusion transcript was detected with reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis. SKY analysis suggested that the ring chromosome was composed of material from chromosome 8. Subsequent FISH analysis with a whole-chromosome 8 paint probe confirmed the SKY results. This study demonstrates the usefulness of SKY as an adjunct for determining the chromosomal composition of ring chromosomes.
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8/9. Primary Epstein-Barr virus-related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the pleural cavity following long-standing tuberculous empyema.

    Primary non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of the pleural cavity have been described mostly in japan. We report a case of high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (immunoblastic type) of the pleural cavity occurring in a nonimmunocompromised patient 55 years after an artificial pneumothorax was performed for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis. Immunohistochemical study revealed a B phenotype (CD20), and an in situ hybridization detected small nuclear RNAs encoded by Epstein-Barr virus in most lymphomatous cells. A link between primary pleural lymphoma and the local long-standing chronic inflammation, inducing a clonal transformation of Epstein-Barr virus-infected immortalized B lymphocytes, is suspected.
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9/9. Pyothorax-associated lymphoma: description of the first two cases detected in italy.

    BACKGROUND: Pyothorax-associated lymphoma (PAL) is a rare, but distinct, clinico-pathologic entity which occurs most often in Japanese people; to the best of our knowledge, only six cases of it have been reported in Western countries. The tumour develops several decades following artificial pneumothorax or chronic pleuritis due to tuberculous infection, produces pleural effusion associated with extensive local lymphomatous infiltrates, and is sustained by a polymorphic large B-cell clonal proliferation showing EBV integration in the genoma of the neoplastic cells. patients AND methods: Herein we describe two cases of PAL observed in Italian patients, both extensively studied on the clinical, pathological, phenotypic, virological, and molecular levels. RESULTS: The two cases occurred, respectively, 45 and 50 years after therapeutic pneumothorax because of tuberculous pleuritis and were characterized by a pleural mass extending to the thoracic wall, which on histological examination were seen to consist of large elements with immunoblastic morphology. immunohistochemistry show monotypic restriction of Ig light chains, as well as the expression of CD45, B-cell markers (CD20, CD79a, CD45RA), bcl-2 oncogene product, EBNA-2 and, partially, LMP-1. The ratio of cycling cells was extremely high as was the number of mitotic figures. in situ hybridization displayed the presence in the neoplastic cells of the EBV-related small RNAs EBER 1 and 2, which in turn, along with the positivity for EBNA-2 and LMP-1, further strengthened the close relationships between PAL and latent viral infection. Molecular studies revealed, on one hand, clonal rearrangement of the Ig heavy chain J region genes, and on the other, negativity for HHV8 in one case and positivity in the other. CONCLUSIONS: These cases of PAL are the first to be documented in italy; they serve to direct attention to the fact that this condition is not confined to Japanese people, and that its occurrence in Western countries might be underestimated.
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