Cases reported "Rhabdoid Tumor"

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1/224. Successful treatment of a patient with stage IV rhabdoid tumor of the kidney: case report and review.

    The clinical course of a 31-month-old patient with advanced (stage IV) rhabdoid tumor of the kidney (RTK) and an analysis of treatment variables that may impact survival are presented. Treatment included complete resection of abdominal disease, radiation therapy to the abdomen and chest, and chemotherapy on a schedule of dose intensification by reduction of the interval between cycles. Inclusion of doxorubicin in treatment was associated with survival among patients in published series (P = 0.002). The patient was in continuous complete remission 60 months from diagnosis. Stage IV rhabdoid tumor of the kidney can be effectively treated with intensive multimodal therapy. doxorubicin may be an important component of a successful therapeutic regimen.
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2/224. central nervous system atypical teratoid tumor/rhabdoid tumor: response to intensive therapy and review of the literature.

    central nervous system atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (ATT/RT) of infancy and childhood is a unique histologic entity with an extremely aggressive natural history. Standard therapy for infant and childhood medulloblastoma, for which this entity is often mistaken, has been ineffective; most children survive less than 12 months after diagnosis. Intensified therapy has been recently used for children with this disease, with promising results [1,2]. We report four cases of ATT/RT in young children; all had subtotal resections and localized disease at diagnosis. One child treated prior to bone marrow transplant availability died of progressive disease 9 months after diagnosis. Another child, treated with high-dose chemotherapy and radiotherapy in preparation for bone marrow transplant, had a recurrence and died 20 months after diagnosis, without undergoing the transplant. Two children received high-dose chemotherapy and autologous bone-marrow transplant and had a good response to treatment; one survived 19 months, the other child is free of disease 46 months from diagnosis. Intensified therapy has altered the natural history of central nervous system ATT/RT.
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3/224. Malignant mixed Mullerian tumor with rhabdoid features: a report of two cases and a review of the literature.

    Rhabdoid tumors were originally described as a type of pediatric renal neoplasm that contains cells resembling rhabdomyoblasts but lacking muscle differentiation. Extrarenal rhabdoid tumors have since been reported in multiple anatomic sites in the pediatric and adult population. These tumors are characterized by an aggressive clinical course, resistance to treatment, and a rapidly fatal outcome. Eight cases of uterine neoplasms with rhabdoid differentiation have been previously reported. In the three cases where clinical follow-up was available, the patients died of disease within 3 to 17 months after the diagnosis was established. We report two cases of uterine malignant mixed Mullerian tumor (carcinosarcoma) with rhabdoid differentiation. The findings and clinical outcome confirm the aggressive nature of uterine tumors with rhabdoid differentiation. One of the patients died of disease 3 months after initial operative treatment while the other patient's tumor recurred in 1 month and she died within 10 weeks. The poor prognosis of these neoplasms makes their histopathologic recognition important.
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4/224. Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor of the CNS: cytopathology and immunohistochemistry of insulin-like growth factor-II, insulin-like growth factor receptor type 1, cathepsin d, and Ki-67.

    insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-II is a potent growth factor, normally controlled by a number of other factors, including IGF binding proteins and IGF binding protein proteases. In general, the latter increase the bioavailability of IGF by cleaving IGF binding proteins. cathepsin d (an IGF binding protein protease) was also implicated in tumor invasion. Although IGF-II was implicated in the pathogeneses of various childhood neoplasms, its significance in the pathogenesis of atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor of the central nervous system (ATRT-CNS) was not studied to date. We present clinicopathologic features of two cases of ATRT-CNS. In addition, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections were stained immunohistochemically for IGF-II, IGF receptor type 1, cathepsin d, and Ki-67. Both tumors demonstrated diffuse strong cytoplasmic positivity for IGF-II, diffuse cytoplasmic and focal membranous positivity for IGF receptor type I, and diffuse cytoplasmic positivity for cathepsin d. The Ki-67 labeling indices were 10.0% and 1.4%. We conclude that ATRT-CNS cells express both IGF-II and IGF receptor type 1, supporting the hypothesis that autocrine/paracrine stimulation of cell growth by IGF-II might be one mechanism involved in ATRT-CNS tumorigenesis. cathepsin d expressed by the tumor cells might also be involved in both tumor cell invasion and growth. The exact pathogenesis of ATRT-CNS remains to be elucidated.
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5/224. Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with extensive rhabdoid differentiation: clinicopathological features of two cases arising in the gastrointestinal tract.

    This paper describes the pathological features of two cases of composite extra-renal rhabdoid tumor; that is, poorly differentiated carcinoma with extensive rhabdoid differentiation, arising in the small intestine of a 64-year-old man and in the pancreas of a 77-year-old woman. In both cases the tumor behaved aggressively and the patients died from disseminated malignancy within 3 months of original presentation and diagnosis. To the best of our knowledge these are the first examples of such tumors in the small intestine and pancreas.
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6/224. Malignant myoepithelioma of the vulva resembling a rhabdoid tumour.

    AIMS: We report an example of malignant myoepithelioma of the vulva, which has not been hitherto described. We discuss the differential diagnosis and briefly review the literature. methods AND RESULTS: The lesion was found in an 81-year-old woman as an indolent 40 mm tumour. The neoplastic cells showed a myoid, spindled, epithelioid and plasmacytoid phenotype. Hyalinization of extracellular material and myxoid changes were present. There was a partly solid and microcystic pattern and a tight cohesiveness of cells was lacking. The circumscribed multinodular tumour somewhat resembled an extrarenal rhabdoid tumour, having large tumour cells with prominent nucleoli and large amounts of acidophilic cytoplasm. Immunohistochemically, the tumour cells were immunoreactive for cytokeratin, vimentin, muscle-specific actin, alpha-smooth muscle actin, and S100 protein, but not for desmin, epithelial membrane antigen, factor viii-related antigen, CD34 and CD31. CONCLUSIONS: The histological and cytomorphological appearance of the tumour well as the immunohistochemical findings suggest the diagnosis of malignant myoepithelioma, possibly derived from minor vestibulary glands or ectopic breast tissue. Differential diagnoses are, in particular, extrarenal rhabdoid tumour and 'proximal type' epithelioid sarcoma. Differentiation is important, because the tumours show a different behaviour and prognosis.
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keywords = rhabdoid tumour, rhabdoid, tumour
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7/224. Analysis of chromosome 22q as an aid to the diagnosis of rhabdoid tumor: a case report.

    Malignant rhabdoid tumor is a highly aggressive tumor of childhood that may present as a soft-tissue primary tumor. We report a soft-tissue neoplasm that was polyphenotypic by immunohistochemical expression of epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural markers and did not meet the criteria for any of the usual pediatric small round-cell tumors. The findings raised the diagnosis of rhabdoid tumor, leading to testing for WT1 mRNA and protein expression, which were positive, as has been reported for renal rhabdoid tumor. This tumor had the typical clinical behavior of rhabdoid tumor with therapy resistance and early tumor-related death. Multicolor spectral karyotyping of this neoplasm showed a balanced translocation between chromosomes 1 and 22 with breakpoints at 1p36 and 22q11-12. The latter region is commonly involved in rhabdoid tumor. This change was also identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization. This case suggests that studies of chromosome 22 may be required to distinguish rhabdoid tumor from other soft-tissue tumors.
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8/224. Simultaneous presentation of atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor in siblings.

    Atypical rhabdoid/teratoid tumor (ATT/RHT) is a rare malignant neoplasm which appears in early childhood. The present paper describes clinical and pathological features of ATT/RHT which occurred simultaneously in 2 sisters diagnosed at a 15 day interval. Both children were treated by surgical resection, subtotal in the first case and total in the second. Postoperatively, chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy, 50.4 Gy on the posterior fossa, were administered. Despite this therapy, both sisters died at 14 months and 26 months respectively. The tumors express vimentin and EMA; cells contained intracytoplasmic inclusions. No karyotypic anomaly was detected. This is the first description of familial ATT/RHT.
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keywords = rhabdoid
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9/224. Malignant rhabdoid tumor of the vulva. Case report.

    The poor prognosis of malignant rhabdoid tumor is emphasized and histopathological criteria for distinction from epithelial sarcoma of the vulva are discussed. Immunohistochemical analyses were performed by using nine different antigens including vimentin, cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, desmin, muscle-specific actin, S-100 protein, AP-15, neuron specific enolase. This is the sixth reported case of a malignant rhabdoid tumor of the vulva. The patient died eight months after the initial diagnosis in spite of a combination of surgery, adjuvant chemotherapy and external radiotherapy.
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10/224. Congenital malignant rhabdoid tumor of the orbit.

    Malignant rhabdoid tumor is a rare and highly malignant renal tumor of infancy. Extrarenal tumors involving the orbit have been reported, but never at birth. The authors describe a primary malignant rhabdoid tumor of the orbit in a neonate who had massive unilateral proptosis at birth. Clinical, radiographic, and histologic features of the tumor are discussed.
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