Riveiro-Falkenbach, Erica, Villanueva, Cándida A., Garrido, María C., Ruano, Yolanda, García-Martín, Rosa M., Godoy, Elena, Ortiz-Romero, Pablo L., Ríos-Martín, Juan J., Santos-Briz, Angel, and Rodríguez-Peralto, José L.
Mª Carmen Herrero-Sánchez, Concepción Rodríguez-Serrano, Julia Almeida, Laura San Segundo, Susana Inogés, Ángel Santos-Briz, Jesús García-Briñón, Luis Antonio Corchete, Jesús F. San Miguel, Consuelo del Cañizo, and Belén Blanco
Subjects
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Graft-versus-host disease, T cell, PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, PI3K inhibitor, Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs, RC633-647.5, Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens, RC254-282
Abstract
Abstract Background Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) remains the major obstacle to successful allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, despite of the immunosuppressive regimens administered to control T cell alloreactivity. PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway is crucial in T cell activation and function and, therefore, represents an attractive therapeutic target to prevent GvHD development. Recently, numerous PI3K inhibitors have been developed for cancer therapy. However, few studies have explored their immunosuppressive effect. Methods The effects of a selective PI3K inhibitor (BKM120) and a dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor (BEZ235) on human T cell proliferation, expression of activation-related molecules, and phosphorylation of PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway proteins were analyzed. Besides, the ability of BEZ235 to prevent GvHD development in mice was evaluated. Results Simultaneous inhibition of PI3K and mTOR was efficient at lower concentrations than PI3K specific targeting. Importantly, BEZ235 prevented naïve T cell activation and induced tolerance of alloreactive T cells, while maintaining an adequate response against cytomegalovirus, more efficiently than BKM120. Finally, BEZ235 treatment significantly improved the survival and decreased the GvHD development in mice. Conclusions These results support the use of PI3K inhibitors to control T cell responses and show the potential utility of the dual PI3K/mTOR inhibitor BEZ235 in GvHD prophylaxis.
Javier Cañueto, Luis Antonio Corchete‐Sánchez, Chrysalyne D. Schmults, Natalia García‐Sancha, Roberto Corchado‐Cobos, Marina Mendiburu‐Eliçabe, Ángel Santos‐Briz, Esther Cardeñoso‐Álvarez, Jesús Pérez‐Losada, Concepción Román‐Curto, and Emily S. Ruiz
J. Aróstegui Aguilar, A. Diago, R. Carrillo Gijón, M. Fernández Figueras, J. Fraga, A. García Herrera, M. Garrido, M.A. Idoate Gastearena, A. Christian Laga, M. Llamas-Velasco, N. Martínez Campayo, C. Monteagudo, J. Onrubia, N. Pérez Muñoz, J.J. Ríos-Martín, E. Ríos-Viñuela, J.L. Rodríguez Peralto, E. Rozas Muñoz, O. Sanmartín, C. Santonja, A. Santos-Briz, C. Saus, J.M. Suárez Peñaranda, V. Velasco Benito, M.J. Beato Merino, and A. Fernandez-Flores
Subjects
Histology, Dermatology, Pathology and Forensic Medicine
J. Aróstegui Aguilar, A. Diago, R. Carrillo Gijón, M. Fernández Figueras, J. Fraga, A. García Herrera, M. Garrido, M.A. Idoate Gastearena, A. Christian Laga, M. Llamas-Velasco, N. Martínez Campayo, C. Monteagudo, J. Onrubia, N. Pérez Muñoz, J.J. Ríos-Martín, E. Ríos-Viñuela, J.L. Rodríguez Peralto, E. Rozas Muñoz, O. Sanmartín, C. Santonja, A. Santos-Briz, C. Saus, J.M. Suárez Peñaranda, V. Velasco Benito, M.J. Beato Merino, and A. Fernandez-Flores
Subjects
Histology, Dermatology, Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Javier Cañueto, David Revilla-Nebreda, Alberto Conde-Ferreirós, Angel Santos-Briz, Concepción Román-Curto, David Moyano-Bueno, Leonor Revelles-Peñas, Sara Becerril-Andrés, and Instituto de Salud Carlos III
[Background]: Acantholytic cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (aCSCCs) have been classically considered as a high-risk variant of CSCC. However, more recent studies show that aCSCC does not confer more aggressiveness. This study aims to establish whether the prognosis of the aCSCC is worse than that of the non-acantholytic (naCSCC) or not. [Methods]: Retrospective case-control study with 50 aCSCCs and 50 naCSCCs. For each aCSCC, an naCSCC with similar high-risk features to the aCSCC but with no acantholysis was selected. Prognosis between both groups was compared. [Results]: The mean age was 86 years (SD 9.61). Sixty-one patients were men. Thirty-nine CSCCs were located in high-risk head and neck areas. Twenty CSCCs exhibited a poor degree of differentiation, and 36 showed an infiltrative growth pattern. The tumor diameter was 18.71 mm (interquartile range, IQR 35), and the tumor thickness was 6.72 mm (IQR 15.50). Twelve CSCCs exhibited perineural infiltration, and eight CSCCs exhibited invasion beyond the subcutaneous fat. Positive margins after excision of the tumor in 22 aCSCCs vs eight naCSCCs (P, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Grant/Award Number: PI18/000587
Rodríguez-Peralto, José Luis, Espinosa, Enrique, Ríos-Martín, Juan José, Berrocal, Alfonso, Lozano, María Dolores, Arance, Ana, Santos-Briz, Angel, López-Martín, José Antonio, Fernández-Figueras, María Teresa, and Martín-Algarra, Salvador
Juan J. Ríos-Martín, Carlos Santonja, Javier Fraga, María J. Garrido, E. Rozas Muñoz, A. García Herrera, Onofre Sanmartín, J.M. Suárez Peñaranda, A. Santos-Briz, Carles Saus, Carlos Monteagudo, N. Pérez Muñoz, M.A. Idoate Gastearena, V. Velasco Benito, A. Diago, Yosmar Carolina Pérez-Gónzalez, J. Onrubia, M.J. Beato Merino, Mar Llamas-Velasco, J.L. Rodríguez Peralto, Angel Fernandez-Flores, and E. Ríos-Viñuela
Resumen: La patología vascular oclusiva es causante de diversas y variadas manifestaciones clínicas, algunas de ellas con catastróficas consecuencias para el paciente. Dado que las causas de tal oclusión son muy variadas, hemos abordado en un artículo previo reciente en esta misma revista las causas trombóticas. En el presente artículo recopilamos diversas causas adicionales de oclusión intravascular. Abstract: Vascular occlusion has multiple, diverse clinical manifestations, some of which can have grave consequences for patients. It also has a wide variety of causes, including thrombi, which we recently addressed in part I of this review. In this second part, we look at additional causes of vascular occlusion.
M J, Beato Merino, A, Diago, A, Fernandez-Flores, J, Fraga, A, García Herrera, M, Garrido, M A, Idoate Gastearena, M, Llamas-Velasco, C, Monteagudo, J, Onrubia, Y C, Pérez-González, N, Pérez Muñoz, J J, Ríos-Martín, E, Ríos-Viñuela, J L, Rodríguez Peralto, E, Rozas Muñoz, O, Sanmartín, C, Santonja, A, Santos-Briz, C, Saus, J M, Suárez Peñaranda, and V, Velasco Benito
Vascular occlusion has multiple, diverse clinical manifestations, some of which can have grave consequences for patients. It also has a wide variety of causes, including thrombi, which we recently addressed in partI of this review. In this second part, we look at additional causes of vascular occlusion.
Juan Torre-Castro, Laura Nájera, Dolores Suárez, Diego García-Fresnadillo, Azael Freites-Martínez, Angel Santos Briz, Jose Luis Rodríguez Peralto, and Luis Requena
Subjects
Tattooing, Humans, Dermatology, General Medicine, Skin Diseases, Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Abstract
Tattoos are characterized by the introduction of exogenous pigments into the dermis. Tattoos usually serve cosmetic purposes, although they may have other causes, such as traumatic pigment implants in accidents or medical-related tattoos in the context of radiotherapy. Dermatologic adverse reactions are relatively uncommon, and they include infections, immune-mediated reactions, cutaneous lesions secondary to the Koebner phenomenon, exacerbation of preexisting dermatosis, benign and malignant neoplasms, and a miscellaneous group of dermatologic conditions that may appear in a preexisting tattoo. The aim of this study is to review the types of histopathologic reactions that may appear in a preexisting permanent tattoo.
A. Santos-Briz, M.A. Descalzo-Gallego, Juan J. Ríos-Martín, María Teresa Fernández-Figueras, Angel Fernandez-Flores, Carlos Monteagudo, Antonio Tejera-Vaquerizo, Celia Requena, Victor Traves, and José Luis Rodríguez-Peralto
Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty, Consensus, Skin Neoplasms, Histology, Venereology, Delphi Technique, Metodo delphi, Dermatology, Pathology and Forensic Medicine, Delphi technique, Pathology, Registros, Humans, Medicine, Registries, Método Delphi, Melanoma, Societies, Medical, business.industry, Pronóstico, Histología, Prognosis, Review Literature as Topic, Consenso, Cutaneous melanoma, Lymph Node Excision, Sentinel Lymph Node, business
Abstract
This article describes a proposed protocol for the histologic diagnosis of cutaneous melanoma developed for the National Cutaneous Melanoma Registry managed by the Spanish Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (AEDV). Following a review of the literature, 36 variables relating to primary tumors, sentinel lymph nodes, and lymph node dissection were evaluated using the modified Delphi method by a panel of 8 specialists (including 7 pathologists). Consensus was reached on the 30 variables that should be included in all pathology reports for cutaneous melanoma and submitted to the Melanoma Registry. This list can also serve as a model to guide routine reporting in pathology departments.
Beato Merino, M J, Diago, A, Fernández-Flores, Á, Fraga, J, García Herrera, A, Garrido, M, Idoate Gastearena, M Á, Llamas-Velasco, M, Monteagudo, C, Onrubia, J, Pérez-González, Y C, Pérez Muñoz, N, Ríos-Martín, J J, Ríos-Viñuela, E, Rodríguez Peralto, J L, Rozas Muñoz, E, Sanmartín, O, Santonja, C, Santos-Briz, Á, Saus, C, Suárez Peñaranda, J M, and Velasco Benito, V
La patología vascular oclusiva es causante de diversas y variadas manifestaciones clínicas, algunas de las cuales son de catastróficas consecuencias para el paciente. Sin embargo, las causas de tal oclusión son muy variadas, extendiéndose desde trombos por acción descontrolada de los mecanismos de coagulación, hasta anomalías de los endotelios de los vasos u oclusión por materiales extrínsecos. En una serie de dos artículos hacemos una revisión de las principales causas de oclusión vascular, resumiendo sus manifestaciones clínicas principales y los hallazgos histopatológicos fundamentales. Esta primera parte corresponde a las oclusiones vasculares que cursan con trombos.
C. Román Curto, A. Santos-Briz, M. Medina Migueláñez, N. Segurado Tostón, S. del Carmen Martínez, and L. Puebla Tornero
Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty, Reticular erythema, Erythema, business.industry, lcsh:Surgery, Case Report, lcsh:RD1-811, 030230 surgery, Dermatology, Breast implants, Pacemaker, 03 medical and health sciences, Reticular telangiectatic erythema, 0302 clinical medicine, Post-implantation erythema, 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis, Implantable device, Reticular connective tissue, Etiology, Medicine, Surgery, medicine.symptom, business, skin and connective tissue diseases
Abstract
Reticular telangiectatic erythema is a benign dermatosis which has been described on patients with pacemakers, implantable devices or materials inserted in their body. Etiology of this entity hasn't been clarified since the first description in 1981 but it is suggested that physical or mechanical factors have to be involved. We present the second case of bilateral reticular telangiectatic erythema by breast implants described in the literature.
Alberto Conde-Ferreirós, Rubén Garcia Castro, David Moyano-Bueno, Esther Cardeñoso, Angel Santos-Briz, and Alex Viñolas-Cuadros
Subjects
education.field_of_study, Pathology, medicine.medical_specialty, integumentary system, CD30, business.industry, Population, Atypical fibroxanthoma, Dermatology, General Medicine, CD15, medicine.disease, Malignancy, BCL6, Pathology and Forensic Medicine, 030207 dermatology & venereal diseases, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, hemic and lymphatic diseases, medicine, Desmin, Differential diagnosis, education, business
Abstract
Atypical fibroxanthoma is a rare mesenchymal skin tumor of intermediate malignancy that typically occurs on sun-damaged skin of elderly patients. Histologically, it is composed of pleomorphic cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and abundant cytoplasm, commonly arranged in a spindle cell pattern. Different histologic variants have been described during the past years. We present a case of atypical fibroxanthoma containing a dense inflammatory infiltrate, which in conjunction with the existence of immunoblast-like and Reed-Sternberg-like neoplastic cells could be misinterpreted as a lymphoid neoplasm. Immunohistochemical studies revealed strong positivity of tumor cells for CD10 and negativity for cytokeratins, p63, p40, S100, SOX10, ERG, actin, desmin, B and T-cell markers, BCL6, CD15, and CD30. The inflammatory infiltrate contained a mixed reactive T- and B-cell population with negative T-cell receptor and immunoglobulin heavy rearrangements. We discuss the differential diagnosis of this entity in which clinical, immunohistochemical, and molecular features are essential to avoid the diagnosis of a lymphoproliferative disease.
Ángel Fernández Camporro, Mónica Roncero-Riesco, Leonor Revelles-Peñas, David Revilla Nebreda, Ángela Estenaga, Javier Díaz de la Pinta, and Ángel Santos-Briz Terrón
Subjects
Diagnosis, Differential, Research Letter, Humans, Psoriasis, Dermatology
Abstract
This qualitative study describes a visual clue for the diagnosis of psoriasis, in which the sum of the fragmentation and separation of the laminar parakeratotic stratum corneum and hyperplasia with regular elongation of the rete ridges resembles the letter ñ on histopathologic biopsy specimens.
Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Conde-Ferreirós, Alberto, Moyano-Bueno, David, Santos-Briz, Ángel, Revelles, Leonor, Revilla, David, Becerril, Sara, Román-Curto, Concépción, Cañueto, Javier, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Conde-Ferreirós, Alberto, Moyano-Bueno, David, Santos-Briz, Ángel, Revelles, Leonor, Revilla, David, Becerril, Sara, Román-Curto, Concépción, and Cañueto, Javier
Abstract
[Background]: Acantholytic cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (aCSCCs) have been classically considered as a high-risk variant of CSCC. However, more recent studies show that aCSCC does not confer more aggressiveness. This study aims to establish whether the prognosis of the aCSCC is worse than that of the non-acantholytic (naCSCC) or not. [Methods]: Retrospective case-control study with 50 aCSCCs and 50 naCSCCs. For each aCSCC, an naCSCC with similar high-risk features to the aCSCC but with no acantholysis was selected. Prognosis between both groups was compared. [Results]: The mean age was 86 years (SD 9.61). Sixty-one patients were men. Thirty-nine CSCCs were located in high-risk head and neck areas. Twenty CSCCs exhibited a poor degree of differentiation, and 36 showed an infiltrative growth pattern. The tumor diameter was 18.71 mm (interquartile range, IQR 35), and the tumor thickness was 6.72 mm (IQR 15.50). Twelve CSCCs exhibited perineural infiltration, and eight CSCCs exhibited invasion beyond the subcutaneous fat. Positive margins after excision of the tumor in 22 aCSCCs vs eight naCSCCs (P < 0.02). Nineteen poor-prognosis events were observed (local recurrence, lymph node metastasis, and death from CSCC). However, no differences were observed between both groups when comparing poor-prognosis events. [Conclusion]: The proportion of unfavorable events is similar in aCSCC and naCSCC. The acantholytic histopathological subtype is not associated with a poorer prognosis than the non-acantholytic CSCC in our cohort.
Martín-Algarra, S., Fernández-Figueras, M. T., López-Martín, J. A., Santos-Briz, A., Arance, A., Lozano, M. D., Berrocal, A., Ríos-Martín, J. J., Espinosa, E., and Rodríguez-Peralto, J. L.
Https://doi.org/10.1093/ced/llac079 Dear Editor, We read with interest the paper published in I Clinical and Experimental Dermatology i by Kurihara I et al i . describing a patient with diffuse plane xanthoma arising from regressed tumours of folliculotropic mycosis fungoides (MF). PUVA might have accelerated galectin-7 expression and rendered the lesions ready to generate NCXs
74
F
Normolipaemic
Tumour-stage MF
1 year
Diffuse plane xanthomas around brownish-red nodules MF lesions; foamy histiocytes
After PUVA treatment. 201211
37
M
Hypercholesterolaemia and hypertriglyceridaemia
Patch-stage MF
10 years
Yellowish discolouration of MF patches; foamy histiocytes
Yellowish discolouration of MF patches developed gradually over the previous 2 years before MF diagnosis. PUVA might have accelerated galectin-7 expression and rendered the lesions ready to generate NCXs
74
F
Normolipaemic
Tumour-stage MF
1 year
Diffuse plane xanthomas around brownish-red nodules MF lesions; foamy histiocytes
After PUVA treatment. [Extracted from the article]
SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma, HUMAN papillomavirus, CLINICAL pathology, FINGERS, RETROSPECTIVE studies
Abstract
Background High-risk mucosal human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) seems to play a role in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC), particularly in nail tumours, where genitodigital transmission has been suggested. The role of HR-HPV in nonungual cSCC of the finger needs to be clarified. Aim To evaluate the prevalence, clinicopathological characteristics, surrogates and outcomes of HR-HPV in cSCC of the finger. Methods This was an observational bicentric study including patients with an excised in situ or invasive cSCC located on the finger. Differences in HR-HPV and non-HR-HPV tumours were evaluated. Results Forty-five patients (45 tumours) were included. HR-HPV was detected in 33% of cases (22% HPV type 16). The mean age was lower in patients with HR-HPV than in those with non-HR-HPV (62·4 vs. 81·1 years, P = 0·001). HR-HPV tumours were smaller (10 mm vs. 15 mm, P = 0·07) and more frequently intraepidermal (60% vs. 20%, P = 0·004). The absence of elastosis (P = 0·030) and inflammation (P = 0·026) and the presence of basaloid morphology (P = 0·003) were surrogates of HR-HPV detection. Mean p16 positivity was 61% in HR-HPV and 36% in non-HR-HPV tumours (P = 0·061). Recurrence after surgery was more common in HR-HPV tumours (58% vs. 34%), although this was not statistically significant. HR-HPV was detected in 27% of the nonungual tumours. Conclusion HR-HPV-associated cSCC of the finger appears in younger patients, is smaller and is less infiltrative than non-HR-HPV tumours. The presence of a basaloid morphology and the absence of elastosis and inflammation could be used as markers for HR-HPV detection. The high prevalence of HR-HPV in nonungual cSCC suggests its aetiopathogenic role in these tumours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Byline: Ximena. Calderón-Castrat, Javier. Cañueto, Concepción. Román-Curto, Ángel. Santos-Briz, Emilia. Fernández-López Sir, Reticular telangiectatic erythema associated with the implantation of a medical device is a rare entity, which must be [...]
Conde-Ferreirós, Alberto, Corchete, Luis A., Jaka, Ane, Santos-Briz, Ángel, Fuente, María José, Posada, Rodolfo, Pons, Laura, Podlipnik, Sebastián, Pujol, Ramón M., Román-Curto, Concepción, Toll, Agustí, and Cañueto, Javier
Hidradenoma is presented as a benign small, firm and solitary nodule. Cytological study reveals a lesion mainly composed by two types of cells. The majority of the cases show a greater amount of a polyhedral and slightly basophilic cell type. Here we present a case with a predominance of a larger, rounded-shaped pale to clear cell type, which is characteristic of clear cell hidradenoma. Our case is of interest as, to the authors’ knowledge, no other related publication has described such striking similarities to metastatic clear renal cell carcinoma. Since the prognosis of these two conditions differs dramatically, a differential diagnosis based on immunohistochemistry is highlighted.
Revilla‐Nebreda, D., primary, Roncero‐Riesco, M., additional, Santos‐Briz, Á., additional, Medina‐Migueláñez, M., additional, Segurado‐Tostón, N., additional, and Román‐Curto, C., additional
J, Aróstegui Aguilar, A, Diago, R, Carrillo Gijón, M, Fernández Figueras, J, Fraga, A, García Herrera, M, Garrido, M Á, Idoate Gastearena, Á, Christian Laga, M, Llamas-Velasco, N, Martínez Campayo, C, Monteagudo, J, Onrubia, N, Pérez Muñoz, J J, Ríos-Martín, E, Ríos-Viñuela, J L, Rodríguez Peralto, E, Rozas Muñoz, O, Sanmartín, C, Santonja, Á, Santos-Briz, C, Saus, J M, Suárez Peñaranda, V, Velasco Benito, M J, Beato Merino, and A, Fernandez-Flores
Subjects
Célula de Touton, Granuloma, Xanthogranuloma, Touton giant cell, Giant cell, Giant Langhans cell, Xantogranuloma, Célula de Langhans, Célula gigante
Abstract
This series of 2 articles on dermatopathologic diagnoses reviews conditions in which granulomas form. Part 1 clarifies concepts, discusses the presentation of different types of granulomas and giant cells, and considers a large variety of noninfectious diseases. Some granulomatous diseases have a metabolic origin, as in necrobiosis lipoidica. Others, such as granulomatous mycosis fungoides, are related to lymphomas. Still others, such as rosacea, are so common that dermatologists see them nearly daily in clinical practice.
Leone, Paola E., González, M. Belén, Elosua, Carolina, Gómez-Moreta, Juan A., Lumbreras, Eva, Robledo, Cristina, Santos-Briz, Angel, Valero, José Maria, de la Guardia, Rafael Díaz, Gutiérrez, Norma C., Hernández, Jesús M., and García, Juan L.
González-González, María, Fontanillo, Celia, Abad, María M., Gutiérrez, María L., Mota, Ines, Bengoechea, Oscar, Santos-Briz, Ángel, Blanco, Oscar, Fonseca, Emilio, Ciudad, Juana, Fuentes, Manuel, De Las Rivas, Javier, Alcazar, José A., García, Jacinto, Muñoz-Bellvis, Luís, Orfao, Alberto, and Sayagués, José M.