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Dive into the research topics where Abbas Agaimy is active.

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Featured researches published by Abbas Agaimy.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2007

Minute Gastric Sclerosing Stromal Tumors (GIST Tumorlets) Are Common in Adults and Frequently Show c-KIT Mutations

Abbas Agaimy; Peter H. Wünsch; Ferdinand Hofstaedter; Hagen Blaszyk; Petra Rümmele; Andreas Gaumann; Wolfgang Dietmaier; Arndt Hartmann

Multifocal hyperplasia of interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC hyperplasia) is a precursor of hereditary gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) in patients with germline mutations of c-KIT or PDGFRA, but precursor lesions of sporadic GISTs have not been defined yet. Small hyalinizing stromal tumors of the proximal stomach (referred to in this study as GIST tumorlets) were collected prospectively from 98 consecutive autopsies and additional cases were retrieved from surgical pathology files (total n=57). GIST tumorlets were grossly detectable in 22.5% consecutive autopsies performed in individuals older than 50 years. All lesions were located in the cardia, fundus, or proximal body, and ranged in size from 1 to 10 mm (4 mm). Similar lesions were not detected in the antrum, duodenum, and the remainder of the bowel. Histologically, the spindle cell subtype comprised all cases, with hyalinization and calcification in 57% of cases. The spindle cells were immunohistochemically positive for vimentin, CD117, and CD34. Twenty-four cases yielded sufficient DNA for subsequent molecular analysis, which showed c-KIT mutations in 11 cases (46%) and PDGFRA mutations in 1 case (4%). Sporadic GIST tumorlets of the proximal stomach are common in the general population over the age of 50 years and frequently show somatic c-KIT mutations. GIST tumorlets probably represent the grossly recognizable counterpart of sporadic ICC hyperplasia caused by somatic c-KIT or PDGFRA mutations. Early hyalinization and calcification seems to confer limited growth potential, and complete regression of such lesions is common. GIST tumorlets likely represent preclinical (preneoplastic) lesions that need additional stimuli to evolve into clinical GISTs, raising the possibility of a hyperplasia-neoplasia sequence in the development of sporadic GISTs.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2011

Numerous IgG4-positive plasma cells are ubiquitous in diverse localised non-specific chronic inflammatory conditions and need to be distinguished from IgG4-related systemic disorders

Johanna Strehl; Arndt Hartmann; Abbas Agaimy

Background IgG4-related systemic fibrosclerosis is a recently defined disorder characterised by a diffuse or tumefactive inflammatory reaction rich in IgG4-positive plasma cells associated with sclerosis and obliterative phlebitis. Although characteristic histopathological features are essential for the diagnosis of these disorders, to date there exists no consensus regarding the cut-off values used to define a ‘significant IgG4-positive plasma cell count,’ and data regarding the distribution of IgG4-positive plasma cells under common (non-specific) inflammatory conditions are lacking. Methods The authors analysed 121 randomly selected histopathological specimens containing prominent lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates (11 obstructive sialadenitis, 27 inflammatory lesions of the oral cavity, 24 inflammatory gastrointestinal lesions, 15 rheumatoid synovitis, 15 non-specific synovitis, eight non-specific dermatitis and 21 primary carcinomas with a peritumoral inflammatory response). For comparison, seven cases of sclerosing sialadenitis (Küttner tumour) were examined. Results High counts of IgG4 plasma cells were found in sclerosing sialadenitis (mean 40/high-power field (hpf)), contrasting sharply with sialadenitis caused by sialolithiasis (mean 3/hpf). Greatly varied but generally high counts of IgG4-positive plasma cells were also seen in several of the other lesions, particularly in rheumatoid synovitis (mean 55/hpf), oral cavity lesions (mean 79/hpf) and carcinoma-associated inflammatory response (mean 24/hpf). The mean IgG4/IgG ratios for all lesions varied between 0 and 0.4. Conclusions The results demonstrate the ubiquitous occurrence of variably high numbers of IgG4-positive plasma cells under diverse non-specific inflammatory conditions, indicating that high IgG4-positive plasma cell counts and high IgG4/IgG ratios per se do not reliably distinguish IgG4-associated systemic disease from non-specific conditions, and that the IgG4 counts must be cautiously interpreted in the context of appropriate clinical and histopathological features.


American Journal of Pathology | 2009

GLUT1 expression is increased in hepatocellular carcinoma and promotes tumorigenesis.

Thomas Amann; Ulrike Maegdefrau; Arndt Hartmann; Abbas Agaimy; Jörg Marienhagen; Thomas Weiss; Oliver Stoeltzing; Christina Warnecke; Jürgen Schölmerich; Peter J. Oefner; Marina Kreutz; Anja-Katrin Bosserhoff; Claus Hellerbrand

Accelerated glycolysis is one of the biochemical characteristics of cancer cells. The glucose transporter isoform 1 (GLUT1) gene encodes a key rate-limiting factor in glucose transport into cancer cells. However, its expression level and functional significance in hepatocellular cancer (HCC) are still disputed. Therefore, we aimed to analyze the expression and function of the GLUT1 gene in cases of HCC. We found significantly higher GLUT1 mRNA expression levels in HCC tissues and cell lines compared with primary human hepatocytes and matched nontumor tissue. Immunohistochemical analysis of a tissue microarray of 152 HCC cases revealed a significant correlation between Glut1 protein expression levels and a higher Ki-67 labeling index, advanced tumor stages, and poor differentiation. Accordingly, suppression of GLUT1 expression by siRNA significantly impaired both the growth and migratory potential of HCC cells. Furthermore, inhibition of GLUT1 expression reduced both glucose uptake and lactate secretion. Hypoxic conditions further increased GLUT1 expression levels in HCC cells, and this induction was dependent on the activation of the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha. In summary, our findings suggest that increased GLUT1 expression levels in HCC cells functionally affect tumorigenicity, and thus, we propose GLUT1 as an innovative therapeutic target for this highly aggressive tumor.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2009

V600E BRAF mutations are alternative early molecular events in a subset of KIT/PDGFRA wild-type gastrointestinal stromal tumours

Abbas Agaimy; Luigi Terracciano; Stephan Dirnhofer; Luigi Tornillo; A Foerster; Arndt Hartmann; Michel P. Bihl

Background: A small subset (10–15%) of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) lack mutations in KIT and PDGFRA (wild-type GIST). Recently, a novel BRAF exon 15 mutation (V600E) was detected in imatinib-naive wild-type high-risk intestinal GISTs (4%). However, the frequency and distribution of BRAF mutations within the spectrum of GISTs, and whether they might represent secondary events acquired during tumour progression, remain unknown. Methods: 69 GISTs (39 KIT mutants, 2 PDGFRA mutants and 28 wild-type) were analysed for mutations in BRAF exon 15 and KRAS exon 2. To assess the stage at which these mutations might occur in GIST, a considerable number of incidental gastric (n = 23) and intestinal (n = 2) tumours were included. Results: BRAF mutations (V600E) were detected in 2 of 28 wild-type GISTs (7%), but in none of the 41 KIT/PDGFRA mutants. No KRAS mutation was detected. The two BRAF-mutated GISTs measured 4 mm in diameter and originated in the gastric body and the jejunum in two men (mean age, 76 years). Both tumours were mitotically inactive KIT-positive spindle-cell GISTs that were indistinguishable histologically from their more common KIT-mutated counterparts. Conclusion: BRAF mutations represent an alternative molecular pathway in the early tumorigenesis of a subset of KIT/PDGFRA wild-type GISTs and are per se not associated with a high risk of malignancy. Mutations in KIT, PDGFRA and BRAF were mutually exclusive in this study. Results from this and a previous study indicate that BRAF-mutated GISTs show a predilection for the small bowel (four of five tumours), but this needs further evaluation in larger studies.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2006

Gastrointestinal stromal tumours: a regular origin in the muscularis propria, but an extremely diverse gross presentation

Abbas Agaimy; Peter H. Wünsch

BackgroundGastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) are thought to arise from the interstitial cells of Cajal (ICCs). ICCs form a network surrounding the myenteric plexus and between-muscle fibres of the muscularis propria of the tubular GI tract. The cell of origin of so-called extra-gastrointestinal stromal tumours (EGISTs) is not known.Aim and methodsTo study the diversity of gross presentation of GISTs and to critically assess the incidence of EGISTs and their relationship to mural GISTs, a total of 200 neoplasms with typical morphologic and immunohistochemical features of GISTs were reviewed, looking for any degree of association with the muscularis propria of the gut wall.ResultsThere were 130 gastric (65%), 9 duodenal (4.5%), 48 small intestinal (24%), 9 colorectal (4.5%), 1 appendiceal (0.5%) and 3 unclassifiable GISTs (1.5%). Fourteen cases (7%) were initially submitted as EGISTs (four mesenteric, four omental, one pararectal/prostatic, one pelvic/Douglas, one perivesical, one located between root of mesentery and tail of pancreas, one involving the mesentery, omentum and abdominal wall extensively and one located between liver and stomach). After critical re-evaluation of surgical reports and remote clinical history and a careful search for residual muscular tissue from the gut wall in the tumour pseudocapsule (in some cases supported by desmin immunoreactivity), it was possible to reclassify most of these cases (11/14) as either GISTs with extensive extramural growth resulting in loss of contact to the external muscle coat of the gut (8/14) or as metastases from an inoperable GIST (2/14) or from a previously resected deceptively benign tumour (1/14).ConclusionEGISTs are probably rarer than previously reported (1.5% or less in this study). We concluded that most so-called EGISTs represent apparent EGISTs that should have arisen from the outermost muscle coat, but have lost their contact to the point of origin due to extensive extramural growth pattern. From a surgical point of view, it is crucial to document and mark any focal attachment or adhesions to the gut wall noticed during surgery for an apparent EGIST. In contrast to most other neoplasms, GISTs should be defined by virtue of any degree of association with the muscularis propria (no matter how minimal), but not by localisation of the bulk of the tumour.


American Journal of Pathology | 2014

Solitary Fibrous Tumors/Hemangiopericytomas with Different Variants of the NAB2-STAT6 Gene Fusion Are Characterized by Specific Histomorphology and Distinct Clinicopathological Features

Sarah Barthelmeß; Helene Geddert; Carsten Boltze; Evgeny A. Moskalev; Matthias Bieg; Horia Sirbu; Benedikt Brors; Stefan Wiemann; Arndt Hartmann; Abbas Agaimy; Florian Haller

Recurrent somatic fusions of the two genes, NGFI-A-binding protein 2 (NAB2) and STAT6, located at chromosomal region 12q13, have been recently identified to be presumable tumor-initiating events in solitary fibrous tumors (SFT). Herein, we evaluated a cohort of 52 SFTs/hemangiopericytomas (HPCs) by whole-exome sequencing (one case) and multiplex RT-PCR (all 52 cases), and identified 12 different NAB2-STAT6 fusion variants in 48 cases (92%). All 52 cases showed strong and diffuse nuclear positivity for STAT6 by IHC. We categorized the fusion variants according to their potential functional effects within the predicted fusion protein and found strong correlations with relevant clinicopathological features. Tumors with the most common fusion variant, NAB2ex4-STAT6ex2/3, corresponded to classic pleuropulmonary SFTs with diffuse fibrosis and mostly benign behavior and occurred in older patients (median age, 69 years). In contrast, tumors with the second most common fusion variant, NAB2ex6-STAT6ex16/17, were found in much younger patients (median age, 47 years) and represented typical HPCs from deep soft tissue with a more aggressive phenotype and clinical behavior. In summary, these molecular genetic findings support the concept that classic pleuropulmonary SFT and deep-seated HPC are separate entities that share common features but correlate to different clinical outcome.


Cancer Letters | 2011

Spectrum of KIT/PDGFRA/BRAF mutations and Phosphatidylinositol-3-Kinase pathway gene alterations in gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST)

Marc Daniels; Irene Lurkin; Roland Pauli; Erhard Erbstößer; Uwe Hildebrandt; Karsten Hellwig; Uwe Zschille; Petra Lüders; Gabriele Krüger; Jürgen Knolle; Bernd Stengel; Friedrich Prall; Kay Hertel; Hartmut Lobeck; Brigitte Popp; Franz Theissig; Peter H. Wünsch; Ellen C. Zwarthoff; Abbas Agaimy; Regine Schneider-Stock

Pathogenetic pathways of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) lacking mutations in KIT and PDGFRA (∼15%) are still poorly studied. Nearly nothing is known about PI3K alterations in GISTs and only a few GISTs with BRAF mutations have been reported. BRAF mutations (V600E) were found in 3/87 tumors (3.5%) concomitantly were wild type for KIT and PDGFRA. No mutations were detected in KRAS, NRAS, and FGFR3. For the first-time we demonstrated a PIK3CA mutation (H1047L) simultaneously occurring with a 15-bp deletion in KIT exon 11 in one tumor. We suggest that BRAF mutations are of pathogenetic significance in wild type GISTs. The PI3K pathway should be assessed in future studies.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2014

Succinate Dehydrogenase (SDH)-deficient Renal Carcinoma: A Morphologically Distinct Entity: A Clinicopathologic Series of 36 Tumors From 27 Patients

Anthony J. Gill; Ondřej Hes; Thomas G. Papathomas; Monika Sedivcova; Puay Hoon Tan; Abbas Agaimy; Per Arne Andresen; Andrew Kedziora; Adele Clarkson; Christopher W. Toon; Loretta Sioson; Nicole Watson; Angela Chou; Julie Y. Paik; Roderick J. Clifton-Bligh; Bruce G. Robinson; Diana E. Benn; Kirsten Hills; Fiona Maclean; Nicolasine D. Niemeijer; Ljiljana Vlatkovic; Arndt Hartmann; Eleonora P. M. Corssmit; Geert J.L.H. van Leenders; Christopher G. Przybycin; Jesse K. McKenney; Cristina Magi-Galluzzi; Asli Yilmaz; Darryl Yu; Katherine D. Nicoll

Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH)-deficient renal carcinoma has been accepted as a provisional entity in the 2013 International Society of Urological Pathology Vancouver Classification. To further define its morphologic and clinical features, we studied a multi-institutional cohort of 36 SDH-deficient renal carcinomas from 27 patients, including 21 previously unreported cases. We estimate that 0.05% to 0.2% of all renal carcinomas are SDH deficient. Mean patient age at presentation was 37 years (range, 14 to 76 y), with a slight male predominance (M:F=1.7:1). Bilateral tumors were observed in 26% of patients. Thirty-four (94%) tumors demonstrated the previously reported morphology at least focally, which included: solid or focally cystic growth, uniform cytology with eosinophilic flocculent cytoplasm, intracytoplasmic vacuolations and inclusions, and round to oval low-grade nuclei. All 17 patients who underwent genetic testing for mutation in the SDH subunits demonstrated germline mutations (16 in SDHB and 1 in SDHC). Nine of 27 (33%) patients developed metastatic disease, 2 of them after prolonged follow-up (5.5 and 30 y). Seven of 10 patients (70%) with high-grade nuclei metastasized as did all 4 patients with coagulative necrosis. Two of 17 (12%) patients with low-grade nuclei metastasized, and both had unbiopsied contralateral tumors, which may have been the origin of the metastatic disease. In conclusion, SDH-deficient renal carcinoma is a rare and unique type of renal carcinoma, exhibiting stereotypical morphologic features in the great majority of cases and showing a strong relationship with SDH germline mutation. Although this tumor may undergo dedifferentiation and metastasize, sometimes after a prolonged delay, metastatic disease is rare in the absence of high-grade nuclear atypia or coagulative necrosis.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2014

Aberrant DNA hypermethylation of SDHC: a novel mechanism of tumor development in Carney triad

Florian Haller; Evgeny A. Moskalev; Fabio R. Faucz; Sarah Barthelmeß; Stefan Wiemann; Matthias Bieg; Guillaume Assié; Jérôme Bertherat; Inga-Marie Schaefer; Claudia Otto; Eleanor Rattenberry; Eamonn R. Maher; Philipp Ströbel; Martin Werner; J. Aidan Carney; Arndt Hartmann; Constantine A. Stratakis; Abbas Agaimy

Carney triad (CT) is a rare condition with synchronous or metachronous occurrence of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), paragangliomas (PGLs), and pulmonary chondromas in a patient. In contrast to Carney-Stratakis syndrome (CSS) and familial PGL syndromes, no germline or somatic mutations in the succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) complex subunits A, B, C, or D have been found in most tumors and/or patients with CT. Nonetheless, the tumors arising among patients with CT, CSS, or familial PGL share a similar morphology with loss of the SDHB subunit on the protein level. For the current study, we employed massive parallel bisulfite sequencing to evaluate DNA methylation patterns in CpG islands in proximity to the gene loci of all four SDH subunits. For the first time, we report on a recurrent aberrant dense DNA methylation at the gene locus of SDHC in tumors of patients with CT, which was not present in tumors of patients with CSS or PGL, or in sporadic GISTs with KIT mutations. This DNA methylation pattern was correlated to a reduced mRNA expression of SDHC, and concurrent loss of the SDHC subunit on the protein level. Collectively, these data suggest epigenetic inactivation of the SDHC gene locus with functional impairment of the SDH complex as a plausible alternate mechanism of tumorigenesis in CT.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2008

Microscopic gastrointestinal stromal tumors in esophageal and intestinal surgical resection specimens: a clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular study of 19 lesions.

Abbas Agaimy; Peter H. Wünsch; Stephan Dirnhofer; Michel P. Bihl; Luigi Terracciano; Luigi Tornillo

Microscopic gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) (synonyms: sporadic interstitial cell of Cajal hyperplasia, seedling GISTs, minimal GISTs) are common incidental findings in gastroesophageal resections (9% to 35%). To our knowledge, their frequency, clinicopathologic features, and molecular pathogenesis from nongastroesophageal sites have so far not been sufficiently analyzed. We studied 19 lesions from distal esophagus (n=8), gastroesophageal junction (n=2), sigmoid colon (n=5), and vermiform appendix, cecum, rectum, and small intestine (1 each). Microscopic GISTs were detected in 0.2%, 0.1%, and 0.01% of routinely processed resection specimens from sigmoid colon, vermiform appendix, and rectum, respectively. Patients were 11 men and 8 women with a mean age of 66 years (range, 57 to 86 y). Thirteen patients had GI cancers and 5 had diverticular disease. None has a family history of GIST or features of neurofibromatosis 1. Lesions were 0.5 to 4 mm in size (mean, 1.12 mm), were all spindled and had noncircumscribed infiltrating borders. All arose in the muscularis propria and 2 were predominantly subserosal. Immunohistochemistry revealed a CD117+/CD34+/smooth muscle actin-negative phenotype in 18/19 lesions. Three KIT exon 11 mutations (2 point mutations and 1 deletion, all involving W557) were detected in 3/12 lesions with successful molecular analysis. In conclusion, incidental microscopic GISTs are uncommon in intestinal resections (≤0.1%), contrasting with their gastroesophageal counterparts (≥9%). Somatic KIT mutations are early initiating molecular events in a subset of them. The remarkable variation in the incidence of microscopic GISTs at different GI sites suggests an origin from heterogeneous subsets of interstitial cells of Cajal with varying potentials for neoplastic transformation.

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Arndt Hartmann

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Florian Haller

University of Göttingen

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Werner Hohenberger

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Heinrich Iro

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Markus F. Neurath

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Michal Michal

Charles University in Prague

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Roland S. Croner

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Regine Schneider-Stock

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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David L. Wachter

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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