The first reported association of dermatomyositis with malignancy was by Stertz in 1916, who described a patient with proximal muscle weakness, eyelid changes, and evidence of myositis on muscle biopsy as well as a coexisting gastric carcinoma. In the same year, Kankeleit described a patient with dermatomyositis and breast cancer--the seeds of a controversy were thus sewn. We report a female patient with multiple cancer who developed dermatomyositis and review the relevant Japanese literature. Our patient suffered from metachronous bilateral breast cancer and thyroid cancer. She underwent curative resection of all 3 tumors. Our experience suggests that clinicians should perform extensive screening of dermatomyositis patients to salvage those with occult cancer, although the issue of cost effectiveness also has to be considered.
Inflammatory cells play important roles in progression of solid neoplasms including ovarian cancers. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) contribute to angiogenesis and immune suppression by modulating microenvironment. Ovarian cancer develops occasionally on the bases of endometriosis, a chronic inflammatory disease. We have recently demonstrated differential expressions of CXCR3 variants in endometriosis and ovarian cancers. In this study, we showed impaired CXCL4 expression in TAMs of ovarian cancers arising in endometriosis. The expressions of CXCL4 and its variant CXCL4L1 were investigated among normal ovaries (n = 26), endometriosis (n = 18) and endometriosis-associated ovarian cancers (EAOCs) composed of clear cell (n = 13) and endometrioid (n = 11) types. In addition, four cases of EAOCs that contained both benign and cancer lesions contiguously in single cysts were investigated in the study. Western blot and quantitative RT-PCR analyses revealed significant downregulation of CXCL4 and CXCL4L1 in EAOCs compared with those in endometriosis. In all EAOCs coexisting with endometriosis in the single cyst, the expression levels of CXCL4 and CXCL4L1 were significantly lower in cancer lesions than in corresponding endometriosis. Histopathological study revealed that CXCL4 was strongly expressed in CD68+ infiltrating macrophages of endometriosis. In microscopically transitional zone between endometriosis and EAOC, CD68+ macrophages often demonstrated CXCL4− pattern. The majority of CD68+ TAMs in overt cancer lesions were negative for CXCL4. Collective data indicate that that CXCL4 insufficiency may be involved in specific inflammatory microenvironment of ovarian cancers arising in endometriosis. Suppression of CXCL4 in cancer lesions is likely to be attributable to TAMs in part.
SPARC (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine)/ osteonectin/BM-40 is a matricellular protein implicated in development, cell transformation and tumorigenesis. We have examined the role of SPARC in cell transformation induced chemically with 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) and 12-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in embryonic fibroblasts and in the skin of mice. Embryonic fibroblasts from SPARCnull mice showed increases in cell proliferation, enhanced sensitivity to DMBA and a higher number of DMBA/TPA-induced transformation foci. The number of DMBA-DNA adducts was 9 times higher in SPARCnull fibroblasts and their stability was lower than wild-type fibroblasts, consistent with a reduction in excision repair cross-complementing 1 the nucleotide excision repair enzyme in these cells. The SPARCnull mice showed an increase in both the speed and number of papillomas forming after topical administration of DMBA/TPA to the skin. These papillomas showed reduced growth and reduced progression to a more malignant phenotype, indicating that the effect of SPARC on tumorigenesis depends upon the transformation stage and/or tissue context. These data reinforce a growing number of observations in which SPARC has shown opposite effects on different tumor types/stages.
Birt‐Hogg‐Dubé (BHD) syndrome is a rare disorder inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. The affected patients are predisposed to cutaneous fibrofolliculomas, renal cell tumors and lung cysts with recurrent pneumothorax. Contrary to neoplastic events in the skin and the kidney, the lung cysts have frequently been confused with non‐neoplastic changes such as blebs or bullae. Herein is reported a case of multiple lung cysts associated with BHD syndrome. Detailed histopathological characteristics of the lesion are also given. The lung cysts were closely associated with the peripheral interlobular septum, visceral pleura or septal‐pleural junctional region. These cysts were partly abutting alveolar structures, and lined by a layer of alveolar epithelium. These unique microscopic features supported the notion that the BHD lung lesions are distinct from other types of bullous changes. Genomic DNA analysis indicated an aberrant sequence repeat that caused frameshift mutation. Immunohistochemistry showed the localization of folliculin, the BHD gene‐encoding protein, in macrophages and epithelial cells in the patient's and normal control's lungs. Haploinsufficiency of folliculin may cause deranged alveolar development, leading to the aberrant cystic alveolar formation. The unique mutation patterns of abnormal sequence repeats in patients with BHD syndrome are also reviewed.
The WHO report estimates that 12 million people will be diagnosed with some form of cancer this year. In addition, the report predicts that more than 7 million people will die early from the disease. Together, the number of cancer cases and deaths from cancer are expected to increase by one percent each year. Cancer research has seen remarkable advancements, including the multi-step carcinogenesis theory and the identification of a cancer stem cell. These advancements are being applied to clinical therapies targeting the oncogene. In addition, the function of the gene product is becoming clear through analysis of the intracellular signaling of the oncogene. As a result, it has become clear that the morphologies of the cancers depend on the kind of the abnormal gene. Of course, these differences would influence patient's life and death and is summarized by specialists in this area. This theme includes the full range of human diseases regarding medical genetics, biochemistry, microbiology, immunology, anatomy, pathology, structural biology, molecular cell biology, neuroscience and developmental biology. The eBook contains articles written by specialists in this area. It should prove to be of great use to clinicians and scientists in all medical fields.
Renal oncocytosis is a rare disorder in which numerous oncocytic nodules develop in the kidney. An additional case is reported here. The patient was a 51‐year‐old woman who had received hemodialysis for 27 years. Nineteen years previously she had developed a tumorous lesion in the right kidney, which had been diagnosed as oncocytoma with laparotomic biopsy. Recently the kidney was removed because of enlargement of the tumor. The renal parenchyma was entirely replaced with numerous brownish nodules. Histologically, the nodules were composed of nests of uniform oncocytic cells. Ultrastructurally, the oncocytic cells contained numerous mitochondria. Immunohistochemical features of the nodules were identical to those of sporadic oncocytomas, that is, immunophenotypes similar to the distal nephron and reactivity with antimitochondrial antigen. Based on these findings, the lesion was diagnosed as renal oncocytosis. It was not possible to determine whether the larger nodules should be diagnosed as oncocytoma or a part of oncocytosis. Additionally, the germ line mutation of the Birt–Hogg–Dubé (BHD) syndrome gene was examined using the genomic DNA obtained from the peripheral lymphocytes, which failed to show any gene alteration. Despite the rare occurrence pathologists and urologists should be aware of renal oncocytosis, as a precursor lesion of renal oncocytoma and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma.