| Literature DB >> 29295713 |
Anna Myriam Perrone1, Giulia Girolimetti2, Simona Cima3, Ivana Kurelac2, Alessandra Livi4, Giacomo Caprara5, Donatella Santini5, Paolo Castellucci6, Alessio Giuseppe Morganti3, Giuseppe Gasparre7, Pierandrea De Iaco8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Extra-abdominal metastases in low grade endometrial carcinoma are rare events. Inguinal lymphatic spread occurs usually in advanced disease and is associated with abdominal lymph nodes involvement. To our knowledge, isolated inguinal lymph node metastases in patients with early endometrial carcinoma have never been described thus far. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Endometrial carcinoma; Inguinal lymph nodes metastasis; Mitochondrial DNA sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29295713 PMCID: PMC5751855 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3944-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1A- Endometrial endometrioid carcinoma. Low-grade endometrial carcinoma with well-preserved glandular architecture (arrow). B- Inguinal lymph node metastasis. Lymphoid stromal tissue (asterisk) surrounded and infiltrated by low-grade endometrial carcinoma (arrow)
Fig. 2Positron Emission Tomography (PET) showed uptake in the right and left inguinal areas referable to residual disease or inflammation, without other pathological areas
Fig. 3A- Sequence analysis of mtDNA variants in saliva, tumor and metastasis. Red arrows indicate the mutated bases.B- DHPLC analysis of the m.3170 C > M in MT-RNR2 in tumor and saliva. Homo and heteroduplexes are distinguished based on different retention times. Two elution peaks for saliva (heteroduplex and homoduplex) and a single elution curve for tumor are present. Saliva (black), tumor tissue (red). C- DHPLC analysis of the m.3170 C > M in MT-RNR2 in tumor and metastasis. A single elution curve for tumor and metastasis is present. Tumor tissue (red), metastasis (blue)
Fig. 4Hypothetical mode of progression from normal cells to metastasis. Each circle within a cell represents wild type mtDNA (white background) carrying different mutations (colored sectors). Cells with grey mutations may be positively selected and pink mutations may start becoming selected against during tumor progression of the primary carcinoma (brown-shaded cell among the normal ones). Subsequently, cells devoid of pink mutations and homoplasmic for the grey mutation may be further selected for their metastatic potential, and they may subsequently accumulate green and black mutations (purple-shaded cells among the carcinoma ones)