GI, Liver & Pancreas Pathology
Samaneh Salarvand; Farzaneh Bagheri; Mahsa Gholizadeh; Sima Sharifi; Pooneh Panahi; Ebrahim Esmati; Marzieh Lashkari; Amirmohsen Jalaeefar; Mohammad Shirkhoda; Reza Shahsiah; Reza Ghalehtaki
Abstract
Background & Objective: Iran is located in the esophageal cancer geographical belt. As multiple genetic alterations are responsible for the molecular pathogenesis of esophageal squamous cell cancer (ESCC), the role and frequency of HER2 expression, MMR deficiency, and PI3KCA mutation are not well ...
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Background & Objective: Iran is located in the esophageal cancer geographical belt. As multiple genetic alterations are responsible for the molecular pathogenesis of esophageal squamous cell cancer (ESCC), the role and frequency of HER2 expression, MMR deficiency, and PI3KCA mutation are not well defined.Methods: We carried out HER2/neu expression, dMMR/MSI high, and PI3KCA mutation analysis in specimens of patients with ESCC. We accessed archival tissue blocks related to specimens of 68 ESCC cases at the time of surgery following neoadjuvant chemoradiation. These patients underwent surgery during 2013-2018 at the Cancer Institute of Iran affiliated with the Tehran University of Medical Sciences in Tehran.Results: None of the patients showed HER2 expression, dMMR/MSI high, or PI3K mutations.Conclusion: dMMR/MSI-H and PI3KCA mutation and HER2 expression may not be reliable andfrequent targets for systemic therapy in patients with esophageal SCC.
Fatemeh Nili; Nakisa Niknejad; Mohammad Shirkhoda
Abstract
Malakoplakia is a rare granulomatous disease of the genitourinary system. Gastrointestinal tract is the second most common site of involvement. It usually mimics a malignancy but its association with adenocarcinoma has been rarely reported. A 59-year-old male patient with the history of weight loss ...
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Malakoplakia is a rare granulomatous disease of the genitourinary system. Gastrointestinal tract is the second most common site of involvement. It usually mimics a malignancy but its association with adenocarcinoma has been rarely reported. A 59-year-old male patient with the history of weight loss and rectal bleeding for two months prior to administration was referred to our hospital. Pre-operative CT scan revealed a large sigmoid colon mass with the extension and invasion to the serosal surface as well as multiple regional metastatic lymph nodes. The patient underwent sigmoidectomy with the primary pathologic diagnosis of adenocarcinoma. Pathologic examination revealed a moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma invading peri-colic adipose tissue and inflammatory reaction compatible with malakoplakia at the invasive borders of the tumor with the extension to the serosal surface.In the patients with gastrointestinal malakoplakia, the presence of possible adjacent malignancy should be screened. The possibility of over-staging should also be considered for adenocarcinoma cases in association with malakoplakia