Fredrik Mertens
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Fredrik Mertens.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1996
Juan Rosai; Måns Åkerman; Dal Cin P; DeWever I; Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Anders Rydholm; R. Sciot; Giovanni Tallini; Van den Berghe H; Van de Ven W; Roberta Vanni; Helena Willén
Fifty-nine cases of atypical lipomatous tumors (ALT) of soft tissue (atypical lipomas, well-differentiated liposarcomas) were studied morphologically and cytogenetically as part of an international collaborative study. Forty-nine cases were deeply seated (including retroperitoneum), and 10 were superficial. Clonal chromosomal abnormalities were found in 55 cases (93%). Supernumerary ring or giant marker chromosomes (RGCs), the sole consistent alteration, were found in 37 ALTs (63%). They were more common in tumors that were large (p < 0.001), deeply seated (p < 0.005), that contained lipoblasts (p < 0.05), and that had marked cytologic atypia (p < 0.05). In a relatively short follow-up period (average, 3 years), only three of 59 cases recurred, one resulting in the patients death. All three cases had RGCs. Also, five of the six cases that underwent dedifferentiation had RGCs, indicating that RGCs are associated not only with low-grade malignant behavior (in the form of local recurrence) but also with the potential for tumor progression. When the karyotypic profile of ALT was compared with that of 233 other types of adipose tissue tumors similarly analyzed by the authors, a statistically highly significant correlation (p < 0.0001) was found between ALT and RGCs. These results support the existence of ALT as a distinct tumor subtype that is different from ordinary lipoma and from spindle or pleomorphic lipoma, albeit histogenetically closely related to them. It also supports the proposed pathogenetic link between ALT and dedifferentiated liposarcoma. The association between chromosomal and morphologic findings indicates the potential role of karyotypic analysis in the differential diagnosis of ALT with ordinary lipoma, spindle or pleomorphic lipoma, hibernoma, and myxoid liposarcoma.
American Journal of Pathology | 1999
Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Paola Dal Cin; Ivo De Wever; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Juan Rosai; Anders Rydholm; Raf Sciot; Giovanni Tallini; Herman Van den Berghe; Roberta Vanni; Helena Willén
Soft-tissue tumors have proved to be a fruitful area for the identification of reproducible cytogenetic aberrations, especially among pediatric round-cell sarcomas and lipomatous tumors. Thus far, however, data regarding sarcomas of monomorphic spindle cell type have been limited and somewhat disappointing, with the notable exception of synovial sarcoma. As part of an ongoing international collaborative study, 130 karyotyped spindle-cell sarcomas were reviewed and classified histologically, without knowledge of the clinical and karyotypic data, with the aim of identifying objective correlations between morphology, karyotype, and clinical parameters. Clonal chromosomal abnormalities were identified in 82 cases studied (63%), but only in the group of synovial sarcomas was there clear correlation between the cytogenetic findings, in the form of a consistent t(X;18)(p11;q11), and morphology. Among leiomyosarcomas (41 cases) and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs; 27 cases) as well as in individual examples of rarer entities, there was a general tendency for karyotypic complexity associated with frequent loss or rearrangement of chromosome arms 1p, 10p, 11q, 12q, 17p, and 22q. Rearrangements of 17q (the region of the NF1 gene) were seen in 9/27 (33%) of MPNSTs. Among nine cases of solitary fibrous tumor (in which previous cytogenetic data are very limited) no consistent aberrations were identified. We conclude that, with the exception of synovial sarcoma, most spindle-cell sarcomas share with pleomorphic sarcomas the tendency for karyotypic complexity. There was no indication (in most of these lesions) that detectable cytogenetic aberrations could either facilitate their diagnosis or help to determine prognosis. There is a clear need to further study and understand the significance of multiple chromosomal abnormalities in this group of mesenchymal neoplasms with the particular goal of determining their role in the process of tumor development.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1996
Giovanni Tallini; Måns Åkerman; Dal Cin P; de Wever I; Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Juan Rosai; Anders Rydholm; R. Sciot; Van den Berghe H; Van den Ven W; Roberta Vanni; Helena Willén
Cytogenetic analysis carried out in 28 adipose tissue tumors diagnosed microscopically as myxoid liposarcoma (ML) revealed a t(12;16)(q13:p11) chromosomal translocation in 26 of the 28 cases. Morphologically, these tumors were subclassified into the following categories: well-differentiated, six cases: poorly differentiated round cell type, 17 cases: poorly differentiated spindle cell type, five cases. Poorly differentiated ML behaved in a more aggressive fashion than the well-differentiated tumors. The results of this study confirm the consistency and specificity of the t(12;16)(q13:p11) translocation as the genetic marker of ML, support the contention that liposarcomas with round cells belong to the ML category, and confirm Stouts proposal for the existence of a poorly differentiated ML composed of spindle cells. Cytogenetic analysis may be helpful in the differential diagnosis of ML with atypical lipomatous tumors, which is characteristically associated with ring and giant marker chromosomes, and of ML with lipoblastoma, which is typically associated with 8q alterations. The existence of a mixed ML-atypical lipomatous tumor remains questionable. The genetic events associated with the greater aggressiveness of the poorly differentiated types of ML remain to be determined.
Histopathology | 2000
Roberta Vanni; Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Raphael Sciot; P. Dal Cin; I. De Wever; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Juan Rosai; Anders Rydholm; Giovanni Tallini; H. Van den Berghe; H Willén
Aims
Cancer Cytogenetics: Chromosomal and Molecular Genetic Aberrations of Tumor Cells, Fourth Edition | 2015
Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Sverre Heim
Skin cancer is the most common malignancy in humans. Clonal chromosome abnormalities have been reported in approximately 100 basal cell epitheliomas (BCC). In contrast to BCC, which has no recognized precursor lesion, squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the skin is known to develop through histologic stages, the most important of which are actinic keratosis (squamous cell dysplasia) and carcinoma in situ (severe dysplasia). A wide range of clinically and pathologically different benign and malignant melanocytic tumors are recognized. Appendageal tumors are subdivided into more than 30 benign and malignant subtypes showing apocrine and eccrine differentiation or follicular and sebaceous differentiation. Merkel cell carcinomas have near-diploid karyotypes, often showing rearrangements of chromosome 1. Dermal cylindromas may show similar genetic features to adenoid cystic carcinomas with the occurrence of a t (6; 9) (q22-23; p23-24) leading to a MYB-NFIB fusion gene. (Less)
American Journal of Pathology | 1996
Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Måns Åkerman; P. Dal Cin; I. De Wever; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Juan Rosai; Anders Rydholm; R. Sciot; Giovanni Tallini; H. Van den Berghe; W.J.M. Van de Ven; Roberta Vanni; Helena Willén
Modern Pathology | 1999
R. Sciot; Juan Rosai; Dal Cin P; de Wever I; Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens; F. Mitelman; Anders Rydholm; Giovanni Tallini; Van den Berghe H; Roberta Vanni; Helena Willén
Archive | 2002
F. Mitelman; Bertil Johansson; Fredrik Mertens
Archive | 2010
Hammurabi Bartuma; Anna Collin; Henryk A. Domanski; Fredrik Vult von Steyern; Nils Mandahl; Fredrik Mertens
Cancer Cytogenetics, THIRD EDITION | 2010
Fredrik Mertens; Nils Mandahl