The American journal of pathology
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We used the polymerase chain reaction on 63 tissue specimens of histologically staged classic Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) from 40 patients, 14 specimens from 14 acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-KS cases (all from the same geographic area over a 10-year period), and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 1 of the non-AIDS KS patients to amplify a specific 210-bp genomic sequence of the newly discovered KS-associated herpesvirus (KSHV). Also tested were 86 benign and malignant endothelial lesions, which potentially simulated each KS histological stage and were further matched by age approximation and by sex with a classical KS specimen. The lesions included hemangioma, lymphangioma, pyogenic granuloma, and angiosarcoma. ⋯ None of the various other endothelial lesion, skin lesions in immunosuppressed patients, or AIDS-KS endothelial cell lines contained amplifiable KSHV DNA, which indicates that reactivation of KSHV is not present in the skin lesions of immunosuppressed patients and probably is not a ubiquitous agent that secondarily infects proliferative endothelium. The absence of amplifiable virus DNA in the cultured endothelium of KS suggests that the stimulus for angioproliferation originates in another host cell or under conditions not reproduced in culture. The polymerase chain reaction is a specific and sensitive means of verifying KS in the differential diagnosis of angioproliferative lessons.