The American journal of surgical pathology
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Sep 2014
Comparative StudyMorphologic and molecular characterization of traditional serrated adenomas of the distal colon and rectum.
Of the serrated polyps, the origin, morphologic features, molecular alterations, and natural history of traditional serrated adenomas (TSAs) are the least understood. Recent studies suggest that these polyps may arise from precursor lesions. The frequencies of KRAS and BRAF mutations vary between these studies, and only 1 small study has measured CpG island methylation using current markers of methylation. ⋯ Unlike sessile serrated adenomas/polyps, TSAs rarely had diffuse expression of ANXA10. Importantly, BRAF-mutated TSAs had more widespread methylation of a 5-marker CpG island panel compared with KRAS-mutated polyps. However, ectopic crypt foci, a proposed defining feature of TSA, were not associated with any specific molecular alteration.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Sep 2014
Multicenter StudyIntralymphatic cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma/lymphomatoid papulosis: expanding the spectrum of CD30-positive lymphoproliferative disorders.
Intravascular large B-cell lymphomas and EBV NK/T-cell lymphomas commonly follow an aggressive clinical course. We recently reported an entirely intravascular anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) in the skin with a surprisingly indolent clinical course; interestingly, this lymphoma involved the lymphatic rather than the blood vasculature. We hypothesized that intravascular skin-limited ALCL is distinct from aggressive systemic intravascular lymphomas in its intralymphatic localization and clinical course. ⋯ All 5 cases of intravascular large B-cell lymphoma involved the blood vasculature and behaved in a clinically aggressive manner; the ALK ALCL, although intralymphatic, was systemic and clinically aggressive. We propose that cutaneous ALK ALCL and related CD30 ALK TLPDs involving the lymphatics are part of an expanding spectrum of CD30 TLPDs. The identification of intralymphatic as distinct from blood vascular localization may provide critical prognostic and therapeutic information.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Sep 2014
Diagnostic pitfalls of differentiating desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) from Wilms tumor (WT): overlapping morphologic and immunohistochemical features.
Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) and blastemal-predominant Wilms tumor (WT) share overlapping histologic features, yet accurate distinction is critical because of differing prognosis and treatment. We encountered a neck mass in a young adult with a concomitant abdominal mass. The neck mass was initially concerning for DSRCT on the basis of the poorly differentiated morphology, desmoplastic stroma, and immunoreactivity for desmin and cytokeratin. ⋯ Moreover, we demonstrate coexpression of desmin and cytokeratin in both DSRCT (9 of 12) and WT blastema (11 of 22). Importantly, although dot-like desmin reactivity and coexpression of desmin and cytokeratin are historically associated with DSRCT, we demonstrate that these features can be seen in either DSRCT or blastemal-predominant WT. In these challenging cases, detection of an EWSR1-WT1 rearrangement and selective WT1 carboxy-terminus immunoreactivity (characteristic of DSRCT) or dual immunoreactivity for the WT1 amino-terminus and carboxy-terminus (characteristic of WT) remain the most discriminating diagnostic tools.