Academic literature on the topic 'Rhabdoid colorectal cancer'

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Journal articles on the topic "Rhabdoid colorectal cancer"

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Bolzacchini, Digiacomo, Marrazzo, Sahnane, Maragliano, Gill, Albarello, Sessa, Furlan, and Capella. "BRAF Mutation in Colorectal Rhabdoid and Poorly Differentiated Medullary Carcinomas." Cancers 11, no. 9 (August 26, 2019): 1252. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers11091252.

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Colorectal rhabdoid carcinomas (CRbCs) are very rare and aggressive cancers. The BRAFmutation and CpG island methylator phenotype have been reported to be common features ofCRbCs. This study reviews the literature about CRbCs and analyzes the clinicopathological andmolecular profiles of seven CRbCs characterized by large discohesive cells with abundanteosinophilic cytoplasm, showing hyaline inclusions and large rounded to bean-shaped nuclei. Forcomparison, we included four poorly differentiated medullary carcinomas (PDMCs) with focalaspects mimicking rhabdoid features. Overall survival was poor in both subsets, with 78% ofpatients dying of disease within 2–11 months. The main features of CRbCs were: Loss of/reduced SMARCB1/INI expression, intense vimentin immunostaining, and dense neutrophilic infiltration. The PDMCs were positive for pancytokeratin but negative for vimentin and showed moderate peritumoral/intratumoral CD8+ lymphocytes. All PDMCs showed SMARCB1(INI-1) expression. The coexistence of BRAF and TP53 mutations was observed in 80% of CRbCs and PDMCs. PDMCs always showed microsatellite instability and CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP), while CRbCs were CIMP negative and exhibited microsatellite instability (MSI) in two out of seven cases. CRbCs are characterized by BRAF and TP53 mutations. Loss/reduced expression of nuclear SMARCB1/INI, intense vimentin immunostaining, dense neutrophilic infiltration, and low frequency of CIMP are useful markers to recognize these rare aggressive tumors.
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Remo, Andrea, Erminia Manfrin, Pietro Parcesepe, Alberto Ferrarini, Hye Seung Han, Ugnius Mickys, Carmelo Laudanna, et al. "Centrosome Linker–induced Tetraploid Segregation Errors Link Rhabdoid Phenotypes and Lethal Colorectal Cancers." Molecular Cancer Research 16, no. 9 (May 21, 2018): 1385–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.mcr-18-0062.

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Wong, Eugene, Lawrence J. Oh, Kazi Nahar, Adrian Lee, and Stephen Clarke. "Primary Pericardial Sarcoma with Right Atrial Invasion and Multiple Bilateral Pulmonary Metastases in a Patient with Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Cancer." Case Reports in Oncological Medicine 2016 (2016): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/6208029.

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Primary tumours originating from the pericardium are extremely rare. Previous studies have reported that these tumours account for only 6.7–12.8% of all mediastinal tumours with an overall prevalence of 0.001% to 0.007%. The majority of these tumours are benign lipomas or pericardial cysts. The most common pericardial malignancy is mesothelioma. Sarcomas are soft-tissue mesenchymal malignancies originating from various parts of the body but are extremely rare in this area. We report a case of a 52-year-old female who was diagnosed with a primary sarcoma with rhabdoid differentiation originating from the pericardium. The patient presented to her GP with a four-week history of progressive dyspnea and chest pain on exertion. Chest X-Ray demonstrated a prominent pericardial effusion and suspicious chest and pericardial lesions. Biopsies of the effusion and primary tumour identified on FDG/PET scans revealed the diagnosis of primary undifferentiated sarcoma. On thoracotomy, it was noted that the tumour had invaded the right atrium; therefore, pericardial window was aborted and a drain inserted instead. The patient was then started on chemotherapy; however, progression soon occurred and the patient died within 4 months, suggesting there is urgent need for efficacious treatments for sarcomatous lesions.
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Kojima, Masatsugu, Toru Miyake, Tomoyuki Ueki, Hiroyuki Ohta, Ryoji Kushima, Masanori Shiohara, Hiroo Mizuta, et al. "INI1-negative colorectal undifferentiated carcinoma with rhabdoid features and postoperative rapidly growing liver metastases: a case report and review of the literature." Surgical Case Reports 7, no. 1 (April 27, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40792-021-01189-5.

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Abstract Background Malignant tumors with rhabdoid features are extremely rare. They can occur in various organs, including the gastrointestinal tract, with common clinical features of high malignancy and poor prognosis. Case presentation A 41-year-old man visited our hospital complaining of lower abdominal pain and fever. Computed tomography (CT) revealed two wall-thickening lesions in the rectum and sigmoid colon, with the latter invading the small intestine and abdominal wall. Lymph nodes were swollen in the sigmoid mesocolon and at the roots of the inferior mesenteric artery. Colonoscopy revealed a circular type 3 lesion in the sigmoid colon and a semicircular type 2 lesion in the rectum. Biopsies of the sigmoid colon and rectum lesions revealed poorly and moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma cells, respectively. The sigmoid colon, rectum, invaded small intestine, and abdominal wall were resected; lymph node dissection was also performed. Histopathological finding of the sigmoid colon lesion revealed that the tumor cells had poor connectivity with each other, and each cell had eosinophilic cytoplasm and a polymorphic nucleus. These characteristics are termed rhabdoid features, because the morphology of these cells is similar to that of rhabdomyosarcoma tumor cells. Immunohistochemical examination showed that the tumor cells were positive for both epithelial (cytokeratin AE1/AE3) and mesenchymal cell markers (vimentin); however, they were negative for integrase interactor 1 (INI1). Therefore, the sigmoid colorectal cancer was diagnosed as an INI1-negative undifferentiated carcinoma with rhabdoid features. The patient continued to experience high fever after surgery; thus, we performed an abdominal CT scan that revealed cystic lesions in the liver 4 days after surgery. These were absent in the positron emission tomography (PET)-CT scan performed 14 days before surgery. These tumors grew rapidly, and fine needle aspiration cytology revealed that they were undifferentiated carcinomas compatible with metastatic lesions from the undifferentiated carcinoma with rhabdoid features from the sigmoid colon. Chemotherapy was administered but was not effective. The patient died 60 days after surgery. Conclusions INI1-negative colorectal undifferentiated carcinomas with rhabdoid features are extremely rare, have high histological malignancy, and a poor prognosis. Chemotherapy is not effective. Effective systemic therapy is desired.
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Tan, Fangshun, Jinlan Chen, Zhuoying Du, Fangnan Zhao, Yuling Liu, Qi Zhang, and Chengfu Yuan. "MIR17HG: A Cancerogenic Long-Noncoding RNA in Different Cancers." Current Pharmaceutical Design 28 (March 10, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1381612828666220310144500.

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Abstract: LncRNA MIR17HG, located at chromosome 13q31, plays an inevitable role in promoting tumor progressions, such as tumorigenesis, proliferation and metastasis. Besides, lncRNA MIR17HG is rare due to its open reading frame (ORF), which can be translated to produce protein. By systematically retrieval, we summarized that MIR17HG is an emerging lncRNA that exhibits carcinogenically in osteosarcoma (OS), glioma, cervical squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC), colorectal cancer (CRC), gastric cancer (GC), atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors (ATRT). Furthermore, a high expression level of MIR17HG protein is also linked with meningioma. Additionally, MIR17HG polymorphisms in glioma, CRC, liver cancer (LC), breast cancer (BC), head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), multiple myeloma (MM) also have a large influence on cancer susceptibility, prognosis and so on. Collectively, long non-coding RNA MIR17HG’s tumor-stimulative role could be a promising therapeutic target. Besides, by investigating patients’ MIR17HG single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), clinicians could also personalize the productive interventions in gene therapy or predict the diagnosis/prognosis precisely.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Rhabdoid colorectal cancer"

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Parcesepe, Pietro. "The link between centrosome defects and cancer unveiled by CROCC deficiency in rhabdoid colorectal cancer." Doctoral thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/961033.

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The century-old hypothesis on the role of centrosome in cancer remains unresolved. We show that reduced dosage of CROCC, a centrosomal-linker component required for centrosome cohesion and separation, due to mutation or allelic loss at 1p36.13 results in impaired centrosome phenotypes and monopolar mitotic forms characterizing a lethal subset of human colorectal cancers with rhabdoid phenotype. Interfering with CROCC in near-diploid colon cancer cells disrupts bipolar mitotic spindle architecture, and causes unequal DNA segregation errors to daughter cells resulting in a highly aggressive rhabdoid-like phenotype in vitro. Conversely, CROCC restoration in a metastatic cellular model harboring 1p36.13 deletion results in correction of centrosome segregation errors and cell death, revealing a mechanism of tolerance to gross mitotic errors and tetraploidization, two hallmarks of chromosomal instability. Together, our data shed light on a previously unknown link between centrosome cohesion apparatus and lethal cancer phenotypes providing new insight into pathways underlying genome instability.
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