Juan Rosai, MD Dehner, Louis P
Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976),
02/2021, Volume:
145, Issue:
2
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
How is it possible to arrive at this point with only a passing acknowledgment of Juan's many accomplishments and honors: tumors first reported, multiple editions of Ackerman and Rosai, and Rosai and ...Ackerman's Surgical Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology-American Registry of Pathology fascicles on tumors of the thymus and thyroid, hundreds of peer-reviewed papers, editor of the International Journal of Surgical Pathology, editorial board membership of our best journals, editor of the American Registry of Pathology tumor fascicle series, trustee of the American Board of Pathology, United States-Canadian Academy of Pathology Maude Abbot Lecturer, and Distinguished Pathologist Award? The many residents and fellows who have had the privilege of sitting across the microscope from him were the beneficiaries of his superb observational skills and perceptive insights with the flow of images as the slides moved across the stage. From the Lauren V. Ackerman Laboratory of Surgical Pathology, Washington University Medical Center, Barnes-Jewish and St Louis Children's Hospitals, St Louis, Missouri.
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DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, OILJ, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VSZLJ
Background: Placental examination is important for its diagnostic immediacy to correlate with maternal and/or fetal complications and parturitional difficulties. In a broader context, ...clinicopathologic studies of the placenta have addressed a range of pathogenetic questions that have led to conclusive and inconclusive results and interpretations. Methods: Recent standardized morphologic criteria and terminology of placental lesions have facilitated the ability to compare findings from studies that have focused on complications and outcomes of pregnancy. This review is an evaluation of recent studies on placental lesions associated with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). Conclusion: No apparent consensus exists on whether it is fetal inflammation with the release of cytokines or chronic maternal and/or fetal vascular malperfusion is responsible for HIE with a lowering of the threshold for hypoxic ischemia. The counter argument is that HIE occurs solely as an intrapartum event. Additional investigation is necessary.
Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the uterine cervix is an uncommon presentation of the most common soft-tissue sarcoma in the first decades of life. Unlike embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma in other anatomic ...sites, in which 70-80% of cases present before 9 years of age, the average age in our series of 14 cervical cases was 12.4 years (median, 13 years), with an age range of 9 months to 32 years at diagnosis. Of the 14 cases, 12 presented as a polyp at the cervical os; two patients had an infiltrative mass in the cervix without a botryoid polyp. The polyps measured 1.5-5 cm and all had the histopathological pattern of the sarcoma botryoides variant of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, with condensations of primitive and differentiated rhabdomyoblasts beneath the surface epithelium and around endocervical glands. Nodules of benign-appearing cartilage were present in the stroma of six cases (43%). One of the embyronal rhabdomyosarcomas from the youngest patient, 9 months old, also had a distinctive microscopic focus of immature tubular profiles in a primitive stroma; these tubules expressed epithelial and neuroendocrine markers. Two patients had a pleuropulmonary blastoma, one diagnosed 9 years before the embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the cervix and the other recognized synchronously. This latter 9-year old had a DICER1 germline mutation. One patient presented with hirsutism and had a Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor, an incidentally detected cervical embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, and nodular hyperplasia of the thyroid. Although a pleuropulmonary blastoma was not documented in the latter patient, ovarian sex-cord stromal tumors and nodular hyperplasia of the thyroid are manifestations of the pleuropulmonary blastoma family tumor and dysplasia syndrome (OMIM 601200). Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the cervix must be distinguished from other rare entities, including adenosarcoma, malignant mixed Mullerian tumor and low-grade stromal sarcoma, as the former has a better prognosis; 12 of our 14 patients remain disease-free following conservative surgery and chemotherapy. Our study suggests that cervical embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma may be another pathological manifestation in the spectrum of extrapulmonary pathology in the setting of pleuropulmonary blastoma.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UILJ, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZAGLJ, ZRSKP
Juvenile xanthogranulomas (JXG) is a histiocytic disorder, primarily but not exclusively seen throughout the first two decades of life and principally as a solitary cutaneous lesion. This study is a ...retrospective clinical and pathologic review of 174 cases documenting the cutaneous and extracutaneous manifestations in patients presenting from the neonatal period to 20 years of age (mean 3.3 years; median 1 year). There was a male predominance (99 male:75 female) in all categories of clinical presentation, but especially notable in the group with multiple cutaneous lesions (12 male:1 female). A solitary cutaneous lesion accounted for 67% of all cases, followed by a solitary subcutaneous or deep soft tissue mass (28 cases, 16%), multiple cutaneous lesions (13 cases, 7%), a solitary extracutaneous, nonsoft tissue lesion (9 cases, 5%), and multiple cutaneous and visceral–systemic lesions (8 cases, 5%). The recorded deaths due to disease included two neonates with systemic JXG who developed hepatic failure and thrombocytopenia and at autopsy had giant cell-neonatal hepatitis in addition to JXG in the liver and other visceral sites. A third death in a 3-month-old boy with a retroperitoneal–pelvic JXG occurred after failure to control severe hypercalcemia. The characteristic Touton giant cell in variable numbers was a consistent feature of the cutaneous lesions; however, these cells were either absent or present in reduced numbers in the various extracutaneous lesions when compared with JXG in the skin. Spindle cells intermingled among the mononuclear cells or forming short fascicles were seen in both cutaneous and extracutaneous lesions. Immunohistochemistry was performed on all extracutaneous lesions, and the constituent cells, regardless of their individual morphologic features, were uniformly positive for vimentin, CD68, and factor XIIIa and negative for S-100 protein and CD1a. It is widely held that JXG is a proliferative disorder of dendrocytes, possibly dermal dendrocytes; thus, its clinical and pathologic similarities to Langerhans cell histiocytosis are not entirely unexpected in light of the most recently proposed international classification of histiocytic disorders, which includes JXG and Langerhans cell histiocytosis together as “dendritic cell-related” histiocytoses.
Juvenile xanthogranuloma (JXG) is the most common type of non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis whose cell of origin, etiology and pathogenesis are not fully understood. We aimed to provide an update on ...histopathologic and immunophenotypic profile of this well-characterized entity whose relationship to the other histiocytoses has received renewed attention in light of recent molecular genetic studies.
A retrospective review of all the cases with the pathologic diagnosis of “xanthogranuloma” was performed on our archives from 1989 to 2019.
A total of 525 patients with 547 lesions diagnosed as JXG were identified with the median age of 4.5 years, a male predominance (M:F ratio 1.3:1) and a predilection for the head and neck region (40.8%). Cutaneous lesions comprised 76.8% cases and another 15.7% presented within soft tissues. The most common non-soft tissue, extracutaneous lesions included the brain (2.6%), and lungs (1.8%). Three basic histopathologic patterns were identified: early classic (EJXG) (14.2%), classic (CJXG) (45.3%), and transitional JXG (TJXG) (40.5%). Multinucleated giant cells, either Touton or non-Touton, were most frequently present in CJXG followed by TJXG. Mitosis was rare (<1/10 high-power field) among different patterns. There was an association among the patterns and lymphocytic infiltrates (P = 0.036), and presence of Touton or non-Touton giant cells (P < 0.001 for both) but not for mitotic count (P = 0.105) or eosinophilic infiltrates (P = 0.465). Additionally, there was a correlation between age groups and presence of non-Touton giant cells (P = 0.012) but not for Touton cells (P = 0.127). We have demonstrated that immunophenotypic expression of the lesion was not associated with age at diagnosis nor morphologic pattern: factor XIIIa 192/204 (94.1%), CD11c 75/77 (97.4%), CD4 82/84 (97.6%), CD68 200/201 (99.5%), CD163 15/15 (100%), CD1a 1/110 (0.9%), S-100 48/152 (31.6%), CD31 15/21 (71.4%), and vimentin 104/105 (99.0%).
We have documented in a substantial series of cases of JXG that there is a correlation between one of the three basic histopathologic patterns with age at diagnosis, but with a consistent immunophenotype among the three patterns. Considering sensitivity and specificity rates, we suggest that a combination of CD11c, CD4, CD1a and either CD163 (preferred) or CD68 stains provides more specific diagnostic yield in the differentiation of JXG from other histiocytic disorders. JXG is also discussed in terms of its relationship and distinction from other similar histiocytic disorders in the context of MAPK/ERK pathway mutations.
•Cell of origin, etiology and pathogenesis of juvenile xanthogranuloma (JXG) are not fully understood.•A combination of CD11c, CD4, CD1a and either CD163 or CD68 stains is recommended when evaluating for differential diagnosis.•Molecular basis of JXG is yet to be understood.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UILJ, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZAGLJ, ZRSKP
Abstract
Context:
The risk of thyroid cancer and multinodular goiter (MNG) in DICER1 syndrome, a rare tumor-predisposition disorder, is unknown.
Objective:
To quantify the risk of thyroid cancer and ...MNG in individuals with DICER1 syndrome.
Design:
Family-based cohort study.
Setting:
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center (CC).
Participants:
The National Cancer Institute DICER1 syndrome cohort included 145 individuals with a DICER1 germline mutation and 135 family controls from 48 families.
Interventions:
Each individual completed a detailed medical history questionnaire. A subset underwent a 3-day evaluation at the NIH CC.
Main Outcome Measures:
The cumulative incidence of MNG (or thyroidectomy) was quantified using the complement of the Kaplan-Meier product limit estimator. We compared the observed number of thyroid cancers in the NCI DICER1 cohort with matched data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program. We performed germline and somatic (thyroid cancer, MNG) DICER1 sequencing.
Results:
By the age of 40 years, the cumulative incidence of MNG or thyroidectomy was 75% in women and 17% in men with DICER1 syndrome compared with 8% of control women (P < 0.001) and 0% of control men (P = 0.0096). During 3937 person-years of observation, individuals with DICER1 syndrome had a 16-fold increased risk of thyroid cancer (95% confidence interval, 4.3 to 41; P < 0.05) compared with the SEER rates. Of 19 MNG nodules and 3 thyroid cancers, 16 (84%) and 3 (100%), respectively, harbored germline and somatic pathogenic DICER1 mutations.
Conclusions:
We propose a model of thyroid carcinogenesis in DICER1 syndrome. Early-onset, familial, or male MNG should prompt consideration of the presence of DICER1 syndrome.
In a family-based cohort study of the DICER1 syndrome, we quantified the remarkably elevated rates of multinodular goiter and propose a model of DICER1-associated thyroid carcinogenesis.
Juvenile xanthogranuloma is a group C and L non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis, and its cell of origin is still debatable. The expression of CD11c, a more recently described macrophage marker, and CD4 ...have not been studied comprehensively. This study aimed to expand immunophenotypic profile and hence our understanding of the origin of these lesions. The surgical pathology archive was searched for the cases with the pathologic diagnosis of "xanthogranuloma" from 1995 to 2019. Immunohistochemical (IHC) stains were performed for factor XIIIa, CD11c, and CD4. Morphologically, each lesion was classified into early classic, classic, or transitional subtypes. Seventy-seven cases were included with the median age of 7.8 years (male:female 1.3:1). Uniform positivity was noticed for CD4 (n = 77), CD68 (n = 37), CD163 (n = 5), and vimentin (n = 4) stains. Other stains included CD11c 75/77 (97.4%), factor XIIIa 71/76 (93.4%), S-100 protein 4/23 (17.4%), and CD1a 0/18 (0%). Despite insignificant association between morphologic subtype and main studied IHC stains, factor XIIIa reactivity was highest in transitional lesions and CD11c showed higher reactivity in early classic lesions. CD11c and CD4 are sensitive markers and showed promising results in the diagnosis of juvenile xanthogranuloma compared with factor XIIIa. Despite different reactivity of factor XIIIa and CD11c in various morphologic subtypes, such association was statistically insignificant.
DICER1 syndrome (OMIM 606241, 601200) is a rare autosomal dominant familial tumor predisposition disorder with a heterozygous DICER1 germline mutation. The most common tumor seen clinically is the ...pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB), a lung neoplasm of early childhood which is classified on its morphologic features into four types (IR, I, II and III) with tumor progression over time within the first 4-5 years of life from the prognostically favorable cystic type I to the unfavorable solid type III. Following the initial report of PPB, its association with other cystic neoplasms was demonstrated in family studies. The detection of the germline mutation in DICER1 provided the opportunity to identify and continue to recognize a number seemingly unrelated extrapulmonary neoplasms: Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor, gynandroblastoma, embryonal rhabdomyosarcomas of the cervix and other sites, multinodular goiter, differentiated and poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma, cervical-thyroid teratoma, cystic nephroma-anaplastic sarcoma of kidney, nasal chondromesenchymal hamartoma, intestinal juvenile-like hamartomatous polyp, ciliary body medulloepithelioma, pituitary blastoma, pineoblastoma, primary central nervous system sarcoma, embryonal tumor with multilayered rosettes-like cerebellar tumor, PPB-like peritoneal sarcoma, DICER1-associated presacral malignant teratoid neoplasm and other non-neoplastic associations. Each of these neoplasms is characterized by a second somatic mutation in DICER1. In this review, we have summarized the salient clinicopathologic aspects of these tumors whose histopathologic features have several overlapping morphologic attributes particularly the primitive mesenchyme often with rhabdomyoblastic and chondroid differentiation and an uncommitted spindle cell pattern. Several of these tumors have an initial cystic stage from which there is progression to a high grade, complex patterned neoplasm. These pathologic findings in the appropriate clinical setting should serve to alert the pathologist to the possibility of a DICER1-associated neoplasm and initiate appropriate testing on the neoplasm and to alert the clinician about the concern for a DICER1 mutation.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UILJ, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZAGLJ, ZRSKP