| Literature DB >> 26786320 |
Tatiana C Schneider1,2, Ellen Kapiteijn1, Tom van Wezel2, Jan W A Smit3, Jacobus J M van der Hoeven1, Hans Morreau4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sorafenib is an orally active multikinase tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) that targets B-type Raf kinase (BRAF), vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR) 1 and 2, and rearranged during transfection (RET), inducing anti-angiogenic and pro-apoptotic actions in a wide range of solid tumors. A side effect of sorafenib is the occurrence of cutaneous squamous tumors. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26786320 PMCID: PMC4719736 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2060-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Summary of lesions seen in patient 1 after starting sorafenib treatment November 2007
| Date | Lesion |
|---|---|
| February 2008 | SCC on the back |
| April 2008 | Reactive epithelial skin lesion on the back without obvious atypia |
| June 2008 | Lesion with inverted follicular keratosis on the lower left leg |
| September 2009 | Trichilemmoma of the nose |
| March 2010 | Irritated verruca seborrhoica upper right leg |
| May 2010 | Reactive epithelial hyperplasia of the tongue due to a candida infection |
| August 2011 | Invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue |
| December 2011 | SCC lymph node metastasis in the left axilla |
Fig. 1Lymph node metastasis of the SCC of the tongue in patient 1. HE staining of a fine needle aspirate (FNA) of a cervical lymph node using a standard embedding procedure of cytology material and histologic processing. Atypical squamous cells with (para-)keratotic horn were seen, indicative of metastasized SCC
Fig. 2BRAF DNA sequencing. Identification of a rare BRAF mutation c.1799-1801het_delTGA
Fig. 3Pathological analysis of pleural effusion in patient 2. FNA of a right-sided pleural effusion after embedding and histological processing. a HE; b: TTF1 immunohistochemistry (IHC); c: PAX8 IHC
Fig. 4PTC recurrence in the laryngeal cricoid of patient 3. In a biopsy from the laryngeal cricoid solid sheets of tumor cells were seen with focal keratinisation. Panel a shows the HE stained tissue. Immunohistochemical analysis of TTF-1 (panel b) and P63 (Panel c) is shown. A large proportion of the cells stained positive for P63, supporting the squamous features. However, there was a fraction a cells that stained moderately positive for TTF-1 (thick arrow in panel b), partly overlapping with P63 positivity (thin arrow in panel c). Thyroglobulin also stained focally positive (not shown). Due to the TTF-1 and thyroglobulin positivity, we favoured the diagnosis of recurrent papillary thyroid cancer with remarkable squamous metaplasia over a primary laryngeal squamous carcinoma