Literature DB >> 9504675

Cutaneous lymphadenoma: an adnexal neoplasm with intralobular activated lymphoid cells.

E Rodríguez-Díaz1, C Román, M Yuste, A G Morán, T Aramendi.   

Abstract

Cutaneous lymphadenoma is an uncommon epithelial neoplasm with a controverted adnexal differentiation. We report a typical case of cutaneous lymphadenoma that developed on the left cheek of a 18-year-old woman. Histologically, the neoplasm consisted of lobules of basaloid cells with a peripheral palisading array and filled with a lymphocyte-predmoninant mixed cellular population. Numerous intralobular cells with ample amphopilic cytoplasm, large vesicular nuclei, and prominent nucleoli also were noticed. Immunohistochemical study showed labeling of these Reed-Sternberg-like large cells by antibodies against CD30 antigen. Our findings suggest that cutaneous lymphadenoma is a poorly differentiated adnexal neoplasm, probably trichoblastoma-related, where a singular interaction with several immune cells is established, including activated large lymphocytes analogous to those malignantly proliferating in Hodgkin's disease.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9504675     DOI: 10.1097/00000372-199802000-00015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Dermatopathol        ISSN: 0193-1091            Impact factor:   1.533


  1 in total

1.  Cutaneous Lymphadenoma Is a Distinct Trichoblastoma-like Lymphoepithelial Tumor With Diffuse Androgen Receptor Immunoreactivity, Notch1 Ligand in Reed-Sternberg-like Cells, and Common EGFR Somatic Mutations.

Authors:  Carlos Monteagudo; Rafael Fúnez; Beatriz Sánchez-Sendra; José F González-Muñoz; Gema Nieto; Clara Alfaro-Cervelló; Amelia Murgui; Ronald J Barr
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2021-10-01       Impact factor: 6.298

  1 in total

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