| Literature DB >> 29743117 |
Won Jin Ho1, Lisa Rooper2, Sarah Sagorsky3, Hyunseok Kang4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Human papillomavirus-related small cell carcinoma of the head and neck is an extremely rare, aggressive subtype with poor outcomes. Therapeutic options are limited and are largely adopted from small cell lung cancer treatment paradigms. CASEEntities:
Keywords: HPV; Immunotherapy; Oropharyngeal; Small cell cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29743117 PMCID: PMC5943998 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0348-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Hematoxylin and eosin stained sections demonstrated a population of tumor cells with minimal cytoplasm, a high nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio, speckled chromatin, nuclear molding, and prominent mitotic and apoptotic figures, consistent with small cell carcinoma (a, 400×). These cells demonstrated patchy positivity for the neuroendocrine marker synaptophysin (b, 400×) and diffuse, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic positivity for p16 (c, 400×) by immunohistochemistry as well as punctate nuclear reactivity for high-risk HPV by RNA in-situ hybridization (d, 400×), supporting the diagnosis of HPV-related small cell carcinoma
Fig. 2CT scans of the chest and abdomen show numerous bilateral pulmonary nodules measuring up to 43 mm (a-c) and liver lesions with a prominent 20 mm lesion (d) prior to immunotherapy initiation. All lesions are markedly improved (e-h) by four months after treatment with ipilimumab and nivolumab has started
Fig. 320% of tumor cells demonstrated membranous staining for PD-L1, consistent with low expression (400×)
Immunohistochemical analysis of tumor specimens
| PD-L1 | CD4/HPF | CD8/HPF | FOXP3/HPF | CD8/FOXP3 | CD8/CD4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neck primary (pre-treatment) | 20% | 75 | 111 | 31 | 3.58 | 1.48 |
| Metastatic brain (post-treatment) | 10% | 53 | 69 | 9 | 7.67 | 1.3 |
HPF high-power field; immunohistochemistry methods described in Additional file 1