Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where A. Neil Crowson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by A. Neil Crowson.


Modern Pathology | 2006

Basal cell carcinoma: biology, morphology and clinical implications

A. Neil Crowson

Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common malignant neoplasm of humans. Rising dramatically in incidence in North America, as likely reflects changing habits of the population and a move from more northerly climes to the sunbelt of the Southern and Southwestern United States, the incidence is surely to rise even higher in the future. The last decade has seen significant advances in our understanding of BCC biology and novel approaches to therapy, which hinge upon accurate diagnosis and subclassification by pathologists. The purpose of this review article is to summate the research advances in our understanding of BCC biology and to acquaint pathologists and clinicians to the practical issues in BCC diagnosis and subclassification which flow there from.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2003

Pyoderma gangrenosum: a review

A. Neil Crowson; Martin C. Mihm; Cynthia M. Magro

Since its first description in 1930, the pathogenesis of pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) has remained obscure even as an ever‐widening array of systemic diseases has been described in association with it. The histopathologic distinction of PG from other ulcerative processes with dermal neutrophilia is challenging and at times impossible. In consequence, when confronted with a biopsy from such a lesion, the pathologist has an obligation to obtain a full and detailed clinical history. In short, as a diagnosis of PG does not hinge exclusively upon the biopsy findings in isolation from other studies, a solid knowledge of the clinical features, the systemic disease associations and the differential diagnosis will help the pathologist to avoid diagnostic pitfalls or the generation of a report which is non‐contributory to patient care. In this review, we describe in detail the different clinicopathologic forms of PG, summarize the diseases associated with this process in the literature and in our experience, and briefly review the treatment options.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2001

The cutaneous pathology of lupus erythematosus: a review

A. Neil Crowson; Cynthia M. Magro

The presentation of lupus erythematosus (LE) ranges from a skin rash unaccompanied by extracutaneous stigmata to a rapidly progressive lethal multiorgan disease. The diagnosis and subclassification is traditionally based on the correlation of serological and clinical findings. The latter include a photoinduced skin rash, arthralgia, arthritis, fever, Raynaud’s phenomenon, anemia, leukopenia, serositis, nephritis and central nervous sysdtem disease. The conventional classification scheme includes systemic, subacute cutaneous and discoid LE. Recent advances in our understanding of the cutaneous histopathology which correlates with the traditional forms of LE, along with certain novel LE subtypes, are the focus of this review. In addition to the main subtypes of LE, we will discuss associated vasculopathic lesions and the contribution of immunofluorescence microscopy to the diagnosis of LE and related connective tissue disease syndromes. Consideration will be given to unusual variants of LE such as anti‐Ro/SSA‐positive systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), bullous SLE, lymphomatoid LE, lupus erythematosus profundus, drug induced LE, linear cutaneous LE, chiblains LE and parvovirus B19‐associated LE.


Modern Pathology | 2006

Unusual variants of malignant melanoma.

Cynthia M. Magro; A. Neil Crowson; Martin C. Mihm

A potential diagnostic pitfall in the histologic assessment of melanoma is the inability to recognize unusual melanoma variants. Of these, the more treacherous examples include the desmoplastic melanoma, the nevoid melanoma, the so-called ‘minimal-deviation melanoma,’ melanoma with prominent pigment synthesis or ‘animal-type melanoma,’ and the malignant blue nevus. Also problematic are the unusual phenotypic profiles seen in vertical growth phase melanomas; these include those tumors whose morphological peculiarities mimic cancers of nonmelanocytic lineage and those melanomas that express aberrant antigenic profiles not commonly associated with a melanocytic histogenesis. Metaplastic change in melanoma, balloon cell melanoma, signet-ring cell melanoma, myxoid melanoma, small cell melanoma and rhabdoid melanoma all have the potential to mimic metastatic and primary neoplasms of different lineage derivations. Abnormal immunohistochemical expression of CD 34, cytokeratins, epithelial membrane antigen, and smooth muscle markers as well as the deficient expression of S100 protein and melanocyte lineage-specific markers such as GP100 protein (ie HMB-45 antibody) and A103 (ie Melan-A) also present confusing diagnostic challenges. In this review, we will discuss in some detail certain of these novel clinicopathologic types of melanoma, as well as the abnormal phenotypic expressions seen in vertical growth phase melanoma.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2003

Cutaneous vasculitis: a review

A. Neil Crowson; Martin C. Mihm; Cynthia M. Magro

As the skin is commonly involved in systemic vasculitic disorders as well as those hypersensitivity states whose expression is largely skin‐confined, cutaneous vasculitic lesions offer a window to diagnosis and a ready source of accessible tissue for biopsy. In this review, we discuss the pathologic manifestations of chronic vasculitic syndromes such as granuloma faciale and erythema elevatum diutinum; IgA‐associated vasculitis including Henoch‐Schonlein purpura; vasculitis seen in the setting of cryoglobulinemia and hypergammaglobulinemia of Waldenstrom, hereditary deficiencies of complement, and IgA deficiency; those leukocytoclastic vasculitides resulting from hypersensitivity reactions to drug, chemical and foodstuff ingestion; and those vasculitides seen in patients with systemic diseases such as polyarteritis nodosa, rheumatoid arthritis, mixed connective tissue disease, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjogrens syndrome, relapsing polychondritis, Behcets disease, Wegeners granulomatosis, and allergic granulomatosis of Churg and Strauss.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2001

Lupus profundus, indeterminate lymphocytic lobular panniculitis and subcutaneous T-cell lymphoma: a spectrum of subcuticular T-cell lymphoid dyscrasia

Cynthia M. Magro; A. Neil Crowson; Al J. Kovatich; Frank Burns

Introduction: The diagnosis and classification of lymphocytic lobular panniculitis (LLP) has historically proven to be a difficult challenge. We encountered 32 cases of primary LLP which could be categorized as: 1) lupus erythematosus profundus (LEP) (19 patients); 2) an indeterminate group termed indeterminate lymphocytic lobular panniculitis (ILLP) (6 patients); and 3) subcutaneous T‐cell lymphoma (SCTCL) (7 patients).


Human Pathology | 1999

Malignant melanoma with prominent pigment synthesis: “Animal type” melanoma—A clinical and histological study of six cases with a consideration of other melanocytic neoplasms with prominent pigment synthesis

A. Neil Crowson; Cynthia M. Magro; Martin C. Mihm

Rare skin neoplasms in humans, comprising nodules of heavily melanized cells, mimic melanocytic neoplasms seen in horses and laboratory animals and thus are termed animal type melanomas. In part because of their rarity, behavior is unpredictable; many cases manifest a long indolent phase, and metastases are reportable. Over 6 years, the authors encountered nine skin and one lymph node biopsy specimens from six patients in whom light microscopy of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin showed melanocytic neoplasms with prominent pigment synthesis. Clinical follow-up was obtained by telephone contact with clinicians. There were three women, two men, and one boy, aged 9 to 85 years, whose lesions were described as blue-black nodules with irregular borders from 1.0 to 4.0 cm in size, located on the scalp, lower extremities, back, and sacrum. The dermatopathology comprised confluent dermal sheets of heavily melanized cells whose nuclei, where discernible, were large with irregularly thickened membranes, coarse chromatin, prominent, often spiculated nucleoli, and irregular parachromatinic clearing. Mitoses were infrequent. Four lesions had an epidermal component. One patient suffered metastases to regional lymph nodes, liver, and lungs with lethal effect, one experienced regional lymph node metastases but is still alive, one had local cutaneous metastases but was lost to follow-up, and one has a chest wall mass that has not yet been investigated. This rare dermal-based melanocytic neoplasm with prominent pigment synthesis, the animal type melanoma, has a biological behavior difficult to predict on morphological grounds. We advise complete excision with a 1.0- to 2.0-cm margin of normal skin and clinical investigation for regional or distant metastases.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2005

Epstein–Barr virus‐ and human herpesvirus 8‐associated primary cutaneous plasmablastic lymphoma in the setting of renal transplantation

Shannon Verma; Gerard J. Nuovo; Pierluigi Porcu; Robert A. Baiocchi; A. Neil Crowson; Cynthia M. Magro

Background:  Plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) is a recently recognized entity most often reported in the oral cavity, mainly in the setting of underlying human immunodeficiency viral infection whereby a role for Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) and more recently human herpesvirus 8 (HHV8) has been described. Although EBV has been implicated in a variety of lymphoproliferative lesions, until recently HHV8 has only been associated with primary effusion lymphoma, multicentric Castlemans disease, and Kaposis sarcoma. We describe a case of PBL occurring in the setting of renal transplantation.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2000

A causal role for parvovirus B19 infection in adult dermatomyositis and other autoimmune syndromes

A. Neil Crowson; Cynthia M. Magro; Magdy R. Dawood

Background: Infection with parvovirus B19 (B19) has been associated with connective tissue disease (CTD) stigmata, namely, a systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)‐like illness, seronegative polyarthritis resembling rheumatoid arthritis, and vasculitis. The dermatopathology and pathogenetic basis of such B19‐associated CTD‐like syndromes have not been elucidated.


Modern Pathology | 2006

Prognosticators of melanoma, the melanoma report, and the sentinel lymph node.

A. Neil Crowson; Cynthia M. Magro; Martin C. Mihm

Since the 1960s, the clinical characteristics of melanoma, its histopathology and its biological basis have been the subject of intense study at pigmented lesion clinics in North America, Europe, and Australia. More recently, the immense database of the Melanoma Committee of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) has been exploited through complex mathematical models to measure the impact of various histologic features of primary melanomas and of sentinel lymph node deposits and to correlate these parameters with patient survival. The wealth of modern information available to pathologists and clinicians has become of vital interest to the prognostication of the individual patient with melanoma. The purpose of this review is to bring to the attention of anatomic pathologists the essential characteristics of the pathology report for primary cutaneous melanoma in the modern era.

Collaboration


Dive into the A. Neil Crowson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin C. Mihm

Brigham and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carl Morrison

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pierluigi Porcu

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raashid Haque

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Al J. Kovatich

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank Burns

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge