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1/361. Fine-needle aspiration cytology of cystic hypersecretory ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast: a case report.

    Cystic hypersecretory intraductal carcinoma is an unusual, cystic form of intraductal breast carcinoma affecting middle-aged women. Cytopathologists have rarely encountered this lesion, with only 2 other cases having been previously reported (Colandrea et al., Arch Pathol Lab Med 1988:112:560-563; Kim et al., Acta Cytol 1997;41:892-896). In our cases, the cytologic findings of both air-dried, Diff-Quick-stained and ethanol-fixed, Papanicolaou-stained smears are presented. The cytologic hallmarks of this entity include the presence of a few scattered epithelial cells with bland nuclear morphology in a background of extensive, amorphous, pink-staining material. Cytomorphologically, the differential diagnosis includes other entities containing pink-staining material such as colloid carcinoma, mucocele-like lesion of the breast, and benign fibrocystic change.
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2/361. Primary pulmonary collision tumor including squamous cell carcinoma and T-cell lymphoma.

    We report a very rare occurrence of a primary collision tumor in the lung consisting of squamous cell carcinoma and T-cell lymphoma. A squamous cell carcinoma was diagnosed histologically following a transbronchial lung biopsy in a 71-year-old woman, but the other component was diagnosed histologically and immunohistochemically only on examination of the resection specimen. The malignant lymphoma was stained by the monoclonal antibody UCHL-1 (anti-D45RO) against t-lymphocytes but was not stained by the L26 (anti-CD20) antibody against b-lymphocytes. Immunostaining for CD3 was positive, confirming a T-cell lineage. Despite systemic chemotherapy, the patient died 7 months after operation, from progression of the lymphoma. Our case, which illustrates interesting attributes of collision tumors, consisted of an ordinary squamous cell carcinoma and a rare T-cell lymphoma arising in the lung, with the latter part of the combination dictating subsequent treatment and outcome.
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3/361. Detection of human papilloma virus type 58 in a case of a perianal bowen's disease coexistent with adult T-cell leukemia.

    A case of bowen's disease (BD) that appeared in the perianal region of a 65-year-old Japanese woman coexistent with chronic adult T cell leukemia (ATL) is described. Histopathological findings revealed that irregularly arranged tumor cells with atypical nuclei throughout the epidermis, which itself disclosed hyperkeratosis, dyskeratotic cells, and clumping cells. Positive staining for HPV antigens was immunohistochemically seen in several nuclei of the tumor cells. Electron microscopic study of the tumor tissue disclosed virus particles of about 50 nm in diameter form the squamous cells. A positive band at 256 bp was obtained by PCR using HPV-L1 primer. The amplified dna by L1 primer completely corresponded to that of HPV-58.
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4/361. Multiple basal cell carcinomas associated with hairy cell leukaemia.

    We report the case of a caucasian woman who, between the ages of 49 and 51 years, developed multiple (> 20) basal cell carcinomas (BCC). There was no family history of BCC. No abnormalities in the human homologue of the drosophila segment polarity gene patched (PTCH), glutathione S-transferases T1 and M1, or cytochrome P450 1A1 were detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based molecular analysis. There was, however, actinic damage of the skin in sun-exposed areas. The patient was diagnosed as having hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) at the age of 51 years, based upon leucocyte morphology as assessed by light and electron microscopy, tartrate-resistant acid leucocyte phosphatase (TRAP) staining, fluorescence activated cell scanning of peripheral blood leucocytes and bone marrow histology. As the leukaemia slowly progressed over a 3-month period, the patient developed four further BCCs. Given that HCL is characterized by a profound defect in T-cell function, it is conceivable that T-cell immune dysregulation can contribute to the pathogenesis of BCC, possibly enhancing the aetiological effect of ultraviolet irradiation.
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5/361. Renal adenomatosis associated with carcinoma of the lower urinary tract: a case report with immunohistochemical study.

    A case of renal adenomatosis of the left kidney associated with a carcinoma of the ipsilateral ureter in a 49-year-old man is examined. One hundred and eight adenomas, which were smaller than 15 mm in diameter, and a single microcarcinoma, which measured 1 mm in diameter, were found in the kidney. Further, there were more than 800 hyperplastic lesions which could be classified into three groups: (i) 792 of distal origin; (ii) 24 of proximal origin; and 10 of collecting duct origin. The serial sections obtained from 19 paraffin blocks were stained using Leu M1 as the proximal marker and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) as the distal/collecting marker to assist in determining the origins. Ten of the small adenomas (15 lesions), which did not exceed 3 mm in diameter, were predominantly positive for EMA and five were predominantly positive for Leu M1. Further, hyperplastic lesions of distal and collecting duct origins were diffusely positive for EMA and sporadically positive for Leu M1. The lesions of proximal origin were predominantly positive for Leu M1 and sporadically positive for EMA. These findings suggest that a progression from hyperplasia and a direct transition from a single tubule to adenoma occurred multifocally in different segments of the nephrons throughout the left kidney.
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6/361. Multiple primary cancers and HPV infection: are they related?

    Multiple primary cancers have been reported with increasing frequency in recent years, but the presence of foreign dna sequences of infectious agents in tumours arising in the same patient has so far not been investigated. We report a case of a patient with Hodgkin's lymphoma, an "in situ" cervix carcinoma and an adenocarcinoma of the right and left mammary gland. In all the tumour samples we detected the presence of dna genomic sequences of Papillomavirus type 16. Our results suggest that HPV infection may be an exogenous risk factor even in second primary tumours of non-epithelial origin.
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7/361. Well-differentiated mucinous carcinoma of the ovary and a coexisting brenner tumor both exhibit amplification of 12q14-21 by comparative genomic hybridization.

    Although the coexistence of mucinous ovarian neoplasms and Brenner tumors is well established, the histogenesis and developmental relationship between the two remain unknown. We used comparative genomic hybridization to analyze two such tumors occurring simultaneously, one in each ovary, in a patient. Amplification of 12q14-21 sequences was found in both tumors; in addition, both tumors also had other, different changes, four identified in the brenner tumor and six in the mucinous carcinoma. The occurrence of the same genetic alteration in both tumors in this woman suggests that the mucinous carcinoma and brenner tumor may be clonally related, i.e., one arose from the other by means of metastatic spreading of transformed cells from one ovary to the other. An alternative explanation is that some unknown, putative tumorigenic agent induced similar and synchronous pathogenetic changes in the epithelium of both ovaries. The phenotypic differences between the tumors are presumably attributable to the other unique genetic abnormalities identified in both tumor types.
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8/361. Primary smooth muscle tumor of the liver encasing hepatobiliary cystadenoma without mesenchymal stroma.

    We describe a 59-year-old Japanese woman with a large mass of her liver encasing cystic components. Radiologic imaging showed the mass to be hypervascular, and surgical resection disclosed a white tumor. The solid portion was immunohistochemically characterized as a smooth muscle tumor. The cystic components were multilocular and lined with columnar epithelium, consistent with a hepatobiliary cystadenoma. The epithelium strongly stained for CA19-9. The subepithelial space was occupied by collagenous connective tissue interspersed with a small number of spindle-shaped cells. The cystic lesions lacked the mesenchymal stroma between the epithelium and connective tissue layer. There have been no previous reports of a hepatic smooth muscle tumor encasing a hepatobiliary cystadenoma. Because of the pathogenesis of the cystadenoma, it is possible to assume that the smooth muscle tumor also arose from the cells composing the biliary duct in association with the development of the cystadenoma.
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9/361. Ampullary somatostatinoma in a patient with Merkel cell carcinoma.

    A 59-yr-old white man with Merkel cell carcinoma of his right leg status post extensive skin resection and chemotherapy had dilated hepatic and common bile ducts on a routine follow-up abdominal CT scan. A 1.9-cm ampullary mass was appreciated on endoscopy. histology showed psammoma bodies and positive immunoperoxidase staining consistent with a somatostatinoma. Merkel cell tumors and somatostatinomas are extremely rare neuroendocrine tumors derived from neural crest cells. Associations have been found between somatostatinomas and other islet cell tumors with multiple endocrine neoplasia syndromes, but no reported association has been published between islet cell tumors and Merkel cell tumors. This patient represents the first documented case of Merkel cell carcinoma and somatostatinoma in a single patient. Such an occurrence may represent a previously undescribed neuroendocrine tumor syndrome, and this possibility should be considered when either tumor is diagnosed.
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10/361. Combined small and transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder with CA19-9 production.

    It is well known that extrapulmonary small cell carcinoma, which exhibits morphological features similar to those observed in the lung, occurs in various organs. Clinically, most cases manifest aggressive biological behavior. A case of small cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder producing a high level of serum carbohydrate antigen (CA) 19-9, in which expression was confirmed in cancer cells of small as well as transitional cell carcinoma in the same tumor mass by immunostaining is reported. This paper documents combined small and transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder with CA19-9 production, although it has already been reported that adenocarcinoma or transitional cell carcinoma in various organs frequently expresses CA19-9. Observations suggest that the histogenesis of some cases of combined small and transitional cell carcinoma in the urinary bladder may be the same, as both can produce CA19-9.
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