Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mark E. F. Smith is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mark E. F. Smith.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1996

Pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor of soft parts. A low-grade neoplasm resembling neurilemoma.

Mark E. F. Smith; Cyril Fisher; Sharon W. Weiss

Fourteen examples of an unusual mesenchymal tumor characterized by sheets and fascicles of mitotically inactive, hemosiderin-stippled, spindled, and pleomorphic cells, situated around an angiectatic vasculature, are described. The 14 tumours developed in eight women and six men (aged 32-83 years) and ranged in size from 2.3 to 8 cm. Eleven cases presented in the subcutaneous tissues, of which eight were located in the lower extremity. All featured prominent clusters of thin-walled ectatic vessels surrounded by perivascular hyaline material representing a combination of fibrin and collagen. In three cases the perivascular hyalinization was so extensive that it constituted more than half of the total tumor area. The tumor cells were similar to those of malignant fibrous hystiocytoma but differed from them by the presence of prominent intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions, the extreme scarcity of mitotic figures, and the occasional presence of CD-34 expression. These tumors also shared several features with neurilemomas, such as their unusual vasculature, intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions, lack of mitotic figures, and abundance of mast cells. They could be distinguished from neurilemomas, however, by the usual presence of infiltrative margins and the absence of S-100 protein. Follow-up information on eight patients (6 months to 25 years) indicated recurrences in four cases, with one of the three patients experiencing numerous recurrences over a 25-year period. No patient has developed metastases, however. We suggest that this tumor is a low-grade sarcoma of uncertain lineage in which the vascular changes are, in part, reflective of its slow growth.


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 1999

Myxoid variant of follicular dendritic cell sarcoma arising in the breast

Cyril Fisher; Bjarki Magnusson; Sverrir Hardarson; Mark E. F. Smith

Follicular dendritic cell sarcoma is a malignant tumor of the follicular dendritic cell which can arise in extranodal sites. We present here a case arising as a mass in the breast of a 41-year-old woman. The tumor was composed of mildly pleomorphic spindly cells with pale ovoid nuclei and cell processes intimately admixed with mature lymphocytes. In much of the lesion the cells were dispersed in cords in a myxoid stroma, and elsewhere there were solid sheets. The neoplastic cells were immunoreactive for CD21, CD35, EMA, and S100 protein, but not for other lymphoid markers or cytokeratin. Electron microscopy showed interdigitating cytoplasmic processes with junctions but no external lamina. The differential diagnosis includes carcinoma, lymphomas, and a variety of myxoid sarcomas. The tumor recurred within a few months and displayed increased nuclear pleomorphism and lymphatic invasion but the patient appears free of disease 3 years after the further excision. This case extends the spectrum of follicular dendritic cell sarcoma in soft tissue sites.


Skeletal Radiology | 2006

Multifocal PVNS in a child – followed over 25 years

Kausik Mukhopadhyay; Mark E. F. Smith; P. M. Hughes

Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a rare disorder of unknown aetiology, characterised by a destructive fibrohistiocytic proliferation with production of villous and nodular protrusions. The disease is commonly monoarticular, and involves the knee in 80% of cases. Occurrence in a child and involvement of multiple joints are extremely unusual. We present a case of multiple joint PVNS in a patient who first presented at the age of five and was subsequently followed up for over twenty-five years. The literature on the subject is briefly reviewed.


Virchows Archiv | 2006

Biphasic solitary fibrous tumour: a report of two cases with epithelioid features

R. Awasthi; J.K. O'Neill; C. E. Keen; P. T. L. Sarsfield; V. S. Devaraj; C. A. Stone; Mark E. F. Smith

We present two cases of solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) showing biphasic morphology with a spectrum of malignant epithelioid components. Slides prepared from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue from both cases were stained with haematoxylin and eosin and by immunohistochemistry. Interphase fluorescent in situ hybridisation studies were performed in both cases using paraffin-embedded tissue to look for the t(X;18) translocation, thereby to exclude synovial sarcoma. Both cases showed biphasic morphology with some areas having typical benign spindled SFT morphology (including CD34 expression) and other areas having a malignant epithelioid appearance. In one of the cases, the epithelioid area, which was well circumscribed and showed packeting of cell groups, demonstrated expression of cytokeratin and epithelial cadherin but not of CD34. In the second case, the immunophenotype of the epithelioid component was similar to that of the benign SFT component. These findings suggest that epithelioid change in SFT shows a range of differentiation at one end, similar to that of a standard SFT, and at the other end, possibly acquiring epithelial characteristics.


Ultrastructural Pathology | 2007

Elevated Oxygen Fraction Reduces Cilial Abundance in Explanted Human Bronchial Tissue

Helen V. Rankin; A. John Moody; Roy Moate; Peter Macnaughton; Joseph Rahamim; Mark E. F. Smith; J. Robert Sneyd

The effect of hyperoxia on ciliary abundance in cultured explants of adult human bronchus was investigated. Bronchus samples were removed during surgery from patients receiving pneumonectomy or lobectomy for malignancy. Part or all of each of these samples was used for measurement of cilial abundance by scanning electron microscopy (SEM); in many cases the remainder was subdivided and cultured at 37°C in DMEM medium, maintaining an air interface at the ciliated surface of each segment. Cultured segments were exposed to normoxia or hyperoxia (95% O2), and a segment was removed every other day for quantification of cilial abundance by SEM. There was a significant inverse relationship between smoking history and abundance (p = .017; ANOVA); mean values for nonsmokers, ex-smokers, and smokers were 98.2% (n = 6), 97.0% (n = 17), and 84.02% (n = 9), respectively. There was some loss of cilia on explant segments cultured under normoxia, but the rate of loss from segments cultured under hyperoxia was significantly greater (W test, p = .00011); rate constants (means ± SE) for cilial loss of 0.0208 ± 0.0044 day−1 and 0.0880 ± 0.0179 day−1 were found for explant segments exposed to 21 and 95% O2, respectively (n = 20).


Virchows Archiv | 2006

Nodular glomeruloid pleuroblastoma: a biphasic pleural-based malignant tumor with immature elements

Pinias Mukonoweshuro; Richard Attanoos; Mark E. F. Smith

An unusual diffuse pleural-based tumor arising in an elderly asbestos-exposed male is presented. The tumor presented in a 72-year-old male with a 30-year history of dockyard work and likely significant asbestos exposure. Macroscopically, at post mortem, the pleural tumor diffusely encased the right lung and was composed of an admixture of neoplastic macro-, and by light microscopy, micro-nodules. Histologically, the tumor had a biphasic growth pattern with glomeruloid epithelioid elements and immature blastematous mesenchymal stroma. Immunophenotypically, the tumor had a complex pattern with epithelioid elements expressing cytokeratins, desmin, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), Ber EP4 and E-cadherin. The diagnostic problems and medicolegal issues surrounding the diagnosis and differentiation from malignant pleural mesothelioma and other tumors are discussed.


International Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2018

EBV+ HHV-8+ Multicentric Castleman Disease With Plasmablastic Aggregates in an HIV+ Man: An Evolving Clinicopathologic Entity

Aditya Shivane; Amy Pearce; Nadia Khatib; Mark E. F. Smith

We report a case of EBV+ and HHV-8+ multicentric Castleman disease with plasmablastic aggregates in an HIV-positive individual. A 41-year-old man presented in early 2015 with fevers, sweats, weight loss, intractable itching, and on subsequent testing was found to be HIV positive. Investigations showed cervical lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly. He was treated for HIV and his symptoms resolved. His symptoms recurred in January 2016, and a provisional diagnosis of multicentric Castleman disease was entertained. The HHV-8 (human herpesvirus-8) and EBV (Epstein-Barr virus) viral load was elevated. A left supraclavicular lymph node core biopsy was performed, which showed features of multicentric Castleman disease with plasmablastic aggregates that are EBV (EBER) and HHV-8 positive. He responded well to rituximab treatment and remains well with no symptoms at recent follow-up.


International Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2017

Diffuse Gastric Carcinoma Undergoes Characteristic Phenotypic Changes in the Intravascular Environment: Evidence for a Reversal of the Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Lymphovascular Metastasis:

Tim S. Bracey; Louise C. Keers; Susan A. Adams; Mark E. F. Smith

This article reports differences between the properties of extravascular carcinoma, which generally forms the vast bulk of a tumor, and those of intravascular carcinoma, at both primary and metastatic lymph node sites. In a morphological and immunohistochemical study of 19 diffuse gastric adenocarcinomas, we report that in comparison to extravascular carcinoma, the intravascular tumor compartment showed frequent and profound phenotypic change, including increased tumor cell cohesion, differentiation and cadherin/catenin expression. For example, greatest cohesion was seen at the intravascular site in 78% (P = .00006) of primary cancers and in 84% (P = .000015) of their lymph node metastases. Pan cadherin showed a statistically significant increase at the intravascular metastatic site (P = .031). We suggest that this change from an extravascular isolated cell phenotype to an intravascular cohesive phenotype represents reversal of the epithelial to mesenchymal transition. Since this proposed reversal of epithelial to mesenchymal transition in intravascular carcinoma is frequently conspicuous in routine histological sections of many types of cancer, as our previous publications have indicated, this process is likely to have widespread significance for the biology of metastasis.


Human Pathology | 2006

Lesions resembling Langerhans cell histiocytosis in association with other lymphoproliferative disorders: a reactive or neoplastic phenomenon?

Lesley Christie; Alan Evans; Susan E. Bray; Mark E. F. Smith; Neil M. Kernohan; David A. Levison; John R. Goodlad


BMC Cancer | 2009

Resistance gene expression determines the in vitro chemosensitivity of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

Sharon Glaysher; Dennis Yiannakis; Francis G. Gabriel; Penny Johnson; Marta Polak; Louise A. Knight; Zoe Goldthorpe; Katharine Peregrin; Mya Gyi; Paul Modi; Joe Rahamim; Mark E. F. Smith; Khalil Amer; B. J. Addis; Matthew Poole; Ajit Narayanan; Tim J. Gulliford; Peter E. Andreotti; Ian A. Cree

Collaboration


Dive into the Mark E. F. Smith's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge