Cases reported "Neuroendocrine Tumors"

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1/47. A case of synchronous double primary lung cancer with neuroendocrine features.

    We report a case of unique double primary lung cancers with neuroendocrine features in a 63-year-old male smoker. The mass in the left lower lobe (LLL) was a small cell/large cell carcinoma with spindle cell sarcomatous areas and organoid structure. The mass in the left upper lobe (LUL) was a tubular adenocarcinoma with neuroendocrine features including organoid nests showing occasional rosette formation, nuclear palisading in the periphery of the nests and positive immunoreaction for CD56, chromogranin a and synaptophysin. The difference in histological structures between the two masses led us to diagnose double primary lung cancer. The combination of small cell lung carcinoma and spindle cell carcinoma is very uncommon. The relationship between LLL and LUL tumors remains unclear. Multiple lung cancers with neuroendocrine features have only rarely been reported in the literature. The patient in our case died of widespread cancer 2 years and 4 months after the surgery without adjuvant chemotherapy, a longer postoperative survival time than in cases of ordinary extensive small cell lung cancer. Multiple lung cancers with neuroendocrine features are extremely rare and similar cases have not been reported in the literature. Neuroendocrine differentiation has attracted widespread attention and, therefore, examining neuroendocrine features in lung cancers is important.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cancer
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2/47. Cellular neurothekeoma with possible neuroendocrine differentiation.

    We report a case of cellular neurothekeoma showing unusual immunohistochemical findings and occurring on the left upper arm of a healthy 48-year-old woman. She presented with a 1 cm, red, asymptomatic, dermal nodule of 1 year duration. A biopsy showed dermal proliferation of plexiform fascicles of spindle-shaped or polygonal cells with plentiful eosinophilic cytoplasms. The immunohistochemical profile included negative stains for S-100, CD34, factor xiiia, CD68, HMB45, cytokeratins, and EMA, strongly positive stains for neuron specific enolase (NSE), synaptophysin, and chromogranin a, and focally positive ones for NKI/C3 and alpha-smooth muscle actin. Ultrastructural analysis showed undifferentiated mesenchymal cells with cytoplasmic projections and abundant RER. Although we couldn't find any confirmative cell type in this cellular tumor, we believe that cellular neurothekeoma is predominantly composed of undifferentiated cells that can exhibit features of neuroendocrine cells in addition to fibroblastic or myofibroblastic ones, suggesting a divergent cell origin.
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ranking = 0.0078440410531093
keywords = muscle
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3/47. Overview of chronic diarrhea caused by functional neuroendocrine neoplasms.

    Eight different neoplastic disorders can cause chronic diarrhea attributable to humoral-mediated diarrhea. These include pancreatic endocrine tumor (PET) syndromes (gastrinomas, VIPomas, glucagonomas, somatostatinomas, PET's releasing calcitonin), carcinoid syndrome, medullary thyroid cancer, and systemic mastocytosis. Because these disorders are an uncommon cause of all chronic diarrheas (<1%), they are not often considered in the differential diagnosis, leading to a delay in diagnosis. This is problematic not only because all are treatable, but also because the neoplasm is frequently malignant. In this article, the characteristics and pathogenesis of the diarrhea, important clinical and diagnostic laboratory features, and treatment of each disorder are briefly reviewed, with an emphasis on recent insights.
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ranking = 0.68850602446322
keywords = neoplasm, cancer
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4/47. pheochromocytoma associated with neuroendocrine carcinoma. A new type of composite pheochromocytoma.

    The coexistence of pheochromocytoma and other tumor types in a single adrenal gland has been rarely documented. This type of pheochromocytoma is designated "composite" or "mixed," depending on whether the pheochromocytoma and the nonpheochromocytoma components show the same embryologic origin. The nonpheochromocytoma components reported in the composite pheochromocytoma include ganglioneuroma, ganglioneuroblastoma, neuroblastoma, and malignant schwannoma. The components found in the mixed pheochromocytoma include adrenal cortical neoplasms and spindle cell sarcoma. We report a unique case of composite pheochromocytoma in which the nonpheochromocytoma element is a neuroendocrine carcinoma. The histologic and the immunohistochemical profiles of the 2 distinct components of this tumor were typical for those of pheochromocytoma and neuroendocrine carcinoma. This dual differentiation was also supported by ultrastructural findings. This case not only broadens the morphologic spectrum of composite pheochromocytoma but also provides some additional insight into the histogenesis of this rare but fascinating type of tumor.
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ranking = 0.11951938671083
keywords = neoplasm
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5/47. Primary neuroendocrine carcinoma of the liver: difficult diagnosis of a rare neoplasm.

    Primary neuroendocrine neoplasms of the liver are extremely rare: about 30 cases only have been described in the literature. We report the case of a 42-year-old woman with a ten-year evolution. According to the previously reported cases, primary neuroendocrine carcinoma of the liver is usually multicentric, often mimicking liver metastases. The demonstration of the hepatic origin of a neuroendocrine carcinoma is often arduous. A careful surgical exploration and a prolonged follow-up are mandatory. The treatment of choice is surgical resection when possible. For progressive and unresectable disease, hepatic arterial chemoembolization may be considered. However, the prognosis of liver neuroendocrine tumours is much more favorable than that of hepatocellular carcinoma and progression has to be demonstrated before instauration of potentially harmful therapies.
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ranking = 0.59759693355413
keywords = neoplasm
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6/47. Imaging of nonlaryngeal neuroendocrine carcinoma.

    The imaging and pathologic features of three cases of nonlaryngeal neuroendocrine carcinoma of the head and neck are described. Neuroendocrine carcinomas represent malignant epithelial neuroendocrine neoplasms and are classified as three types: typical carcinoid (well differentiated), atypical carcinoid (moderately differentiated), and small cell neuroendocrine (poorly differentiated) carcinomas. The CT and MR imaging features of these tumors are nonspecific. Paranasal sinus neuroendocrine carcinomas showed expansion and destruction of the sinus, whereas metastatic neuroendocrine carcinomas to an intraparotid lymph node presented as a circumscribed parotid mass on CT scans.
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ranking = 0.11951938671083
keywords = neoplasm
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7/47. Neuroendocrine pancreatic cancer: an unusual case of pancreatitis.

    Acute pancreatitis is a common clinical problem. This case of acute pancreatitis was due to a most uncommon underlying aetiology, a non-functioning neuroendocrine tumour of the pancreas.
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ranking = 0.36363636363636
keywords = cancer
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8/47. Hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes--a soft tissue tumor with mesenchymal and neuroendocrine features. An immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and cytogenetic analysis.

    CONTEXT: Hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes is a recently described biphasic neoplasm of soft tissues that shares mesenchymal and neuroendocrine features. Its morphologic structure is distinctive, with the presence of hyalinized paucicellular foci that are termed rosettes. The cells around the latter display positive immunoreactivity for neuroendocrine markers. The small number of cases described to date indicates that they tend to be localized in the extremities. OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinicopathologic features of 2 unusual cases of hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes. methods AND RESULTS: One tumor was located in the prestyloid parapharyngeal space and the second in the left thigh. Both tumors were well circumscribed and surrounded by a thin capsule-like fibrous band without infiltrating projections. The rosettes were embedded in a spindle cell proliferation. Immunohistochemical stains showed positive results for S100 protein, synaptophysin, CD57, protein gene product 9.5, and neuron-specific enolase exclusively in the cells palisading the rosettes. These markers were negative in the spindle cell portions of the tumor. The latter were immunoreactive for factor xiiia, vimentin, HAM56, collagen IV, and CD68. vimentin was the only marker shared by the rosette-forming cells and the spindle cells. Ultrastructurally, the rosette-forming cells contained neurosecretory granules. This study describes the first cytogenetic analysis in this type of tumor revealing 2 cell lines, both containing a balanced translocation between chromosomes 7 and 16. Follow-up of the patients at 16 and 8 months did not disclose evidence of recurrence. CONCLUSIONS: These 2 new cases increase the awareness of hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes and demonstrate that it is a spindle cell neoplasm of unique cytogenetic rearrangements composed of dendritic, histiocytic, and fibroblastic cells admixed with cells that have neuroendocrine differentiation.
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ranking = 0.23903877342165
keywords = neoplasm
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9/47. neuroendocrine tumors of the gastroenteric canal. Anatomopathological and diagnostic-therapeutic definition. Description of a case with a rare cecal localisation.

    The authors take the case of a neuroendocrine tumour of the cecum as the starting point for an analysis of the anatomopathological and diagnostic-therapeutic aspects of these neoplasms. Furthermore, the authors underline that neuroendocrine tumours (NET) of the colon represent an extremely rare nosological entity and that they are heterogeneous from a clinical and biochemical point of view, thus making a reliable preoperative diagnosis a problem that is still difficult to resolve today.
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ranking = 0.11951938671083
keywords = neoplasm
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10/47. Ischemic colitis associated with paclitaxel.

    Systemic chemotherapy can be complicated by colonic toxicity, which usually determines the onset of pseudomembranous colitis and, rarely, of ischemic colitis in patients with cancer. This report describes the case of a 49-year-old woman with liver metastases from a neuroendocrine tumor of unknown origin who developed mild ischemic colitis after chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxel. The patient developed symptoms of gastrointestinal toxicity with abdominal pain and bloody diarrhea, which resolved in about 10 days. She had a normal white blood cell count throughout her illness; the assay of stool specimens for clostridium difficile toxins and the stool cultures were both negative. A sigmoidoscopy showed a mild, transient ischemic colitis, which was confirmed by pathologic examination of the biopsy specimens. Although carboplatin is not related to severe colonic cytotoxicity, it has been previously reported that paclitaxel induces necrosis of the gastrointestinal mucosa and inhibits angiogenesis. Pseudomembranous colitis is the most frequent complication in patients with cancer who undergo paclitaxel-based chemotherapy and develop gastrointestinal toxicity. Once C. difficile infection has been excluded, a diagnosis of ischemic colitis should be considered, especially in patients with cancer who have normal white blood cell counts.
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ranking = 0.27272727272727
keywords = cancer
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