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result(s) for
"Neuroectodermal Tumors, Primitive, Peripheral - pathology"
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A rare entity of Primary Ewing sarcoma in kidney
by
Xu, Yujie
,
Song, Hong
,
Zhuo, Dong
in
Adrenal glands
,
Adult
,
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
2020
Background
Ewing sarcoma (ES) or primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) represents a spectrum of poorly differentiated and aggressive malignancies. It rarely arises from the kidney and accounts for less than 1% of renal mass. Given the uncharacteristic clinical symptoms and imaging features, renal Ewing sarcoma (RES) is often diagnosed by postoperative pathology.
Case presentation
Herein, we depicted a case of RES, which was administrated in our institution by chief complaints of intermittent left plank pain and palpable abdominal mass. We demonstrated the aggressive behavior of this renal malignancy and summarized its therapeutic modalities and outcomes.
Conclusion
The diagnosis of RES relies on integrated analysis including histomorphology, immunohistochemical staining and confirmation of molecular-genetic testing. Despite the surgery and adjuvant therapy, optimized and potent therapeutic regimes are still urgently needed to improve the poor prognosis of RES.
Journal Article
Primary Ewing sarcoma of the kidney: A series of four cases
2022
Ewing sarcoma (ES), the neuroectodermal derived tumour typically occurs in the bone and soft tissue of children and young adults. Primary ES of the kidney is strikingly rare and only a few cases and small case series have been documented. Due to the highly aggressive nature of this neoplasm, distinction from other morphological mimickers is truly indispensable in terms of treatment and prognosis. Here we describe the clinicopathological features of four cases of primary ES of the kidney with special emphasis on one case having extensive neural differentiation postneo- adjuvant chemotherapy (NACT). Extensive neural differentiation in renal ES has not been documented to date.
Four patients (age range from 15-35 years) had kidney mass and multiple distant metastases at first presentation. Primary diagnosis of Ewing sarcoma was rendered by histopathology with the help of immunohistochemistry on core biopsy material. Tumour cells in all cases showed diffuse membranous CD99, nuclear FLI-1 and NKX2.2. Two of the patients had undergone radical nephrectomy followed by combination chemotherapy. Another two patients were first treated with neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) followed by radical nephrectomy. In one of them, histopathological examination of nephrectomy specimens revealed extensive neural differentiation. The adrenal gland was free in all four cases. The follow-up period was 12 -24 months. Three patients had survived and one of them became disease-free.
Primary ES of the kidney is a rare and lethal entity. Due to overwhelming rarity, chemotherapy protocol has not been standardised and followed as ES in bone/soft tissue. Histopathological confirmation and prompt initiation of treatment may improve patient survival and outcome.
Journal Article
Primary Ewing’s sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor of the ileum: case report of a 16-year-old Chinese female and literature review
2017
Background
Ewing’s sarcoma (ES) and primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) are closely related tumors. Although soft tissue ES/PNET are common in clinical practice, they are rare in the small intestine. Because of the absence of characteristic clinical symptoms, they are easily misdiagnosed as other benign or malignant diseases.
Case presentation
Here, we present the case of a 16-year-old female who complained of anemia and interval hematochezia. Her serum test results showed only a slight elevation of CA-125 and a low level of hemoglobin. Computer tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a cystic and solid mass in the lower abdominal quadrant and pelvic region, which prompted suspicion of a malignant gastrointestinal stromal tumor of the small intestine. After resection, the tumor’s histology and immunohistochemistry (positive for CD99, vimentin and synaptophysin) results suggested ES/PNET. Fluorescent
in situ
hybridization tests proved the breakpoint rearrangement of the
EWSR1
gene in chr 22.Ultrastructural analysis revealed neurosecretory and glycogen granules in the tumor cell cytoplasm.
Conclusions
Together, these data supported the diagnosis of a rare case of localized ES/PNET in the small intestine without adjuvant chemo- or radiotherapy. To our knowledge, this is the first report from China of a primary small bowel ES/PNET in the English-language literature. In addition, on the basis of findings from previous publications and the current case, the optimal treatment for localized gastrointestinal ES/PNET is discussed.
Journal Article
Ewing Sarcoma/Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumor of the Kidney: A Rare and Lethal Entity
2016
Ewing sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor represents a spectrum of undifferentiated tumors with similar biology that together represent the second most common sarcoma in the pediatric–young adult age range. Very rarely, this tumor presents as a primary neoplasm of the kidney. The clinical presentation of this tumor is not specific, and other renal tumors may present with a similar histologic appearance. Establishing the correct diagnosis is critical because renal Ewing sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor carries a strikingly dismal prognosis and thus dictates a specific treatment strategy. A low threshold for the use of ancillary molecular tests is recommended, particularly in diagnostically problematic cases. Important considerations with regards to morphology, immunohistochemistry, and molecular alterations will be reviewed here and should be taken into account before rendering this rare and lethal diagnosis.
Journal Article
Histological heterogeneity of Ewing’s sarcoma/PNET: an immunohistochemical analysis of 415 genetically confirmed cases with clinical support
2009
Ewing’s sarcoma (ES)/peripheral neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) are malignant neoplasms affecting children and young adults. We performed a study to typify the histological diversity and evaluate antibodies that may offer diagnostic/prognostic support. In total, 415 cases of genetically confirmed paraffin-embedded ES/PNET were analyzed on whole sections and in tissue microarrays. This study confirms the structural heterogeneity of ES/PNET, distinguishing three major subtypes: conventional ES (280 cases); PNET (53 cases); and atypical ES/PNET (80), including large cells, vascular-like patterns, spindle pattern, and adamantinoma-like configuration. All cases presented positivity for at least three of the four tested antibodies (CD99, FLI1, HNK1, and CAV1). CAV1 appeared as a diagnostic immunomarker of ES/PNET being positive in CD99-negative cases. Hence, the immunohistochemical analysis confirmed the diagnostic value of all four antibodies, which together cover more than 99% of the tumors, independently of the histological variety. The univariate analysis for survival revealed atypical ES as the only histological parameter apparently associated with less favorable clinical outcome, particularly in the subgroup of patients treated with surgery. In conclusion, the diagnosis of atypical ES is a challenge for the pathologist and needs support from molecular techniques to perform an optimal differential diagnosis with other small round cell tumors.
Journal Article
L1-CAM knock-down radiosensitizes neuroblastoma IMR-32 cells by simultaneously decreasing MycN, but increasing PTEN protein expression
by
Abdallah, Jad
,
Rached, Johnny
,
Abou-Antoun, Tamara
in
Angiogenesis
,
Cancer therapies
,
Care and treatment
2016
Childhood neuroblastoma is one of the most malignant types of cancers leading to a high mortality rate. These cancerous cells can be highly metastatic and malignant giving rise to disease recurrence and poor prognosis. The proto-oncogene myelocytomatosis neuroblastoma (MycN) is known to be amplified in this type of cancer, thus, promoting high malignancy and resistance. The L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1-CAM) cleavage has been found upregulated in many types of malignant cancers. In the present study, we explored the interplay between L1-CAM, MycN and PTEN as well as the role played by PDGFR and VEGFR on tumorigenicity in neuroblastoma cells. We investigated the effect of L1-CAM knock-down (KD) and PDGFR/VEGFR inhibition with sunitinib malate (Sutent®) treatment on subsequent tumorsphere formation and cellular proliferation and migration in the MycN-amplified IMR-32 neuroblastoma cells. We further examined the effect of combined L1-CAM KD with Sutent treatment or radiotherapy on these cellular functions in our cells. Tumorsphere formation is one of the indicators of aggressiveness in malignant cancers, which was significantly inhibited in IMR-32 cells after L1-CAM KD or Sutent treatment, however, no synergistic effect was observed with dual treatments, rather L1-CAM KD alone showed a greater inhibition on tumorsphere formation compared to Sutent treatment alone. In addition, cellular proliferation and migration were significantly inhibited after L1-CAM KD in the IMR-32 cells with no synergistic effect observed on the rate of cell proliferation when combined with Sutent treatment. Again, L1-CAM KD alone exhibited greater inhibitory effect than Sutent treatment on cell proliferation. L1-CAM KD led to the simultaneous downregulation of MycN, but the upregulation of PTEN protein expression. Notably, radiotherapy (2 Gy) of the IMR-32 cells led to significant upregulation of both L1-CAM and MycN, which was abrogated with L1-CAM KD in our cells. In addition, L1-CAM KD radiosensitized the cells as exhibited by the synergistic effect on the reduction in cell proliferation compared to radiotherapy alone. Taken together, our data show the importance of L1-CAM interplay with MycN and PTEN on the MycN amplified neuroblastoma cell radioresistance, proliferation and motility.
Journal Article
Primitive neuroectodermal tumors in patients with testicular germ cell tumors usually resemble pediatric-type central nervous system embryonal neoplasms and lack chromosome 22 rearrangements
by
Einhorn, Lawrence H
,
Ulbright, Thomas M
,
Hattab, Eyas M
in
631/208/2489/1381/1853
,
631/67/1836
,
631/67/1922
2010
Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs) are one of the most frequent types of ‘non-germ cell’ tumor in patients with testicular germ cell tumors and have a guarded prognosis when present in metastatic sites after cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Improved treatments, including targeted therapy, require understanding the biology of these neoplasms. We therefore analyzed the morphologic, immunohistochemical and molecular biologic features of 14 PNETs from 14 patients with concurrent or previous testicular germ cell tumors; 12 tumors were from metastatic sites and 2 were primary in the testis. Using standard light microscopic criteria for central nervous system and peripheral PNETs, we classified nine tumors as medulloepithelioma, three as medulloblastoma/supratentorial PNET, one as neuroblastic tumor with abundant neuropil and true rosettes and one as small cell embryonal tumor/PNET (Ewing sarcoma-like). Immunostains directed against INI1, CD57, S-100 protein, NeuN, WT1, neurofilament, CD99, GFAP, synaptophysin, chromogranin, AE1/AE3 cytokeratin, Fli-1 and collagen IV were performed for each case. INI1 was diffusely and strongly positive in all tumors whereas the other stains, except for cytoplasmic WT1 (which showed substantial reactivity in most tumors), were mostly focal to negative, including CD99 (eight negative, six focal) and Fli-1 (all negative). The most consistently reactive ‘neuroendocrine’ marker was CD57. Each case was also analyzed for chromosome 22 rearrangements using a FISH-based break-apart probe method. Only 1 tumor, classified as medulloepithelioma, was scored positive for chromosome 22 translocation (22% rearranged cells) and the remaining 13 were negative, including the one case that resembled peripheral PNET. We conclude that PNETs derived from testicular germ cell tumors mostly resemble central nervous system PNETs and generally lack the chromosome 22 translocation of peripheral PNETs. Future treatment strategies should take these findings into account.
Journal Article
Clinical Analysis of Primary Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumors in the Female Genital Tract
2014
OBJECTIVEThe aim of the study was to investigate the clinical manifestations, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs) in the female genital tract.
METHODSFrom April 2001 to May 2013, the clinicopathologic characteristics, treatments, outcomes, and prognosis of 11 patients with PNET in the female genital tract were analyzed retrospectively at our hospital.
RESULTSThe location of PNET in the 11 patients presented here included vulva (2 patients), cervix (2 patients), uterus and its ligament (5 patients), and the ovaries (2 patients). Ages ranged from 18 to 59 years (median, 31 years).The main clinical manifestations of PNET in the female genital tract are irregular vaginal bleeding (6 patients), pelvic mass, uterine enlargement, and rapidly increasing vulvar mass (8 patients), and vulvar pain and lower abdominal pain (5 patients). The CA125 levels of 8 patients were elevated before the operations and reduced to normal when the diseases were controlled, while the levels increased as the tumor was progressive. Results for the most commonly used immunohistochemistry studies revealed CD99 in 11 of the 11 tumors, synaptophysin in 6 of the 7 positive tumors, and neuron-specific enolase in 6 of the 6 tumors. Ten patients underwent surgical resection. Nine of them underwent preoperative or/and postoperative combination chemotherapy. The follow-up of 10 patients were available and ranged from 1 to 145 months (median, 30.5 months), 3 of whom experiencing recurrence.
CONCLUSIONSPrimitive neuroectodermal tumor is very rare and can originate from any part of the female genital tract. The tumors had different manifestations but the same pathologic features. CA125 may be an important marker for prognosis and follow-up of PNET of the female internal genital tract.
Journal Article
Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor: a case report
2022
Background
Primitive neuroectodermal tumors are extremely rare and highly aggressive malignant small round cell tumors that arise from the primitive nerve cells of the nervous system or outside it. These tumors share similar histology, immunohistologic characteristics, and cytogenetics with Ewing’s sarcoma. Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors of the chest wall are rare malignant tumors seen in children and young adults.
Case presentation
We report a rare case of peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor in a 4-year-old Albanian girl with a mediastinal tumor and an unusual clinical presentation. She was initially treated for acute polyradiculoneuritis (Guillain–Barré syndrome) owing to pain, weakness in the lower limbs, and walking difficulty, as well as severe irritability. During the second week of treatment, the child began to experience dry cough, chest discomfort, and worsening dyspnea. Chest radiography, chest computed tomography, and contrast-enhanced computed tomography demonstrated a large mass in the right hemithorax that was derived from the posterior mediastinum with expansive growth in all directions and that shifted the mediastinal structures in the anterolateral left direction. Consequently, histopathology and immunohistochemical examination of the markers S-100, CD99, and Ki-67 showed that the tumor cells stained positively for S-100 and CD99. The proliferative index measured by Ki-67 was approximately 20%, which suggested primitive neuroectodermal tumor.
Conclusions
Even though other diseases, including leukemia, lymphoma, and neuroblastoma, may be accompanied by musculoskeletal manifestations in children, other solid tumors, such as peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors, should be considered in the differential diagnosis in any child presenting with musculoskeletal symptoms.
Journal Article
Adamantinoma-like ewing sarcoma arising in the pancreatic tail: a case report of a rare entity and review of the literature
by
Wang, Zhe
,
Zhang, Yingchun
,
Wen, Xiaobo
in
Adamantinoma - chemistry
,
Adamantinoma - pathology
,
Adrenal glands
2023
ALES is a rare subtype that demonstrates the EWSR1-FLI1 translocation characteristic of ES and demonstrates complex epithelial differentiation including diffuse cytokeratin and p40 expression. It has predominantly recognized in the head and neck and is common in middle-aged population. This case is the first case of ALES reported in the pancreatic tail, sharing some morphological characteristics with ALES in the head and neck, including monotonous cytology, infiltrative growth pattern, and complex epithelioid differentiation, but ALES in the head and neck often has high-grade histological features (e.g., necrosis, high mitotic rate, etc.), and sudden keratinization can also occur, but these features were not reflected in this primary pancreatic tail ALES. Although ALES arising in the pancreatic tail and in the head and neck sites share the immunohistochemical and molecular profile, our case can provide new ideas in differential diagnosis of ALES arising in pancreatic tail and promote increased recognition and understanding of ALES.
Journal Article