Sate Hamza
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sate Hamza.
Clinical and Experimental Dermatology | 2004
Kathleen J. Smith; Sate Hamza; Henry Skelton
Imidazoquinolines are topical immune response modifiers. Imiquimod (IMI), the first imidazoquinoline, is approved for the treatment of genital human papillomavirus disease and has shown success as a therapeutic agent for cutaneous premalignant and malignant tumours. To define the pattern of polarization of the local immune response to invasive cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) we pretreated 10 SCCs that were > 3 cm in diameter for 2 weeks with IMI. The tumours were treated on Monday, Wednesday and Friday and excised the next Monday. A battery of immunohistochemical markers was used to define the mononuclear cell populations in the diagnostic, and the excisional biopsy specimens. The total inflammatory infiltrate was increased after IMI therapy: the greatest increase was in the CD8 T cells with a marked relative decrease in the CD68 monocytic/macrophages; the majority of the CD8 T cells showed expression of cytotoxic granules, T cell‐restricted intracellular antigen (TIA) and granzyme B. The relative numbers of monocytes/macrophages were decreased after therapy with IMI with a decrease in CD68+, CD23+, and CD14+ cells and an increase in MAC‐397+, and factor XIIIa+ cells. The epidermal dendritic cells showed a > 75% decrease in CD1a+ cells. The immunohistochemical marker profile after IMI therapy is consistent with that induced by a Th1 and M1 cytokine polarization pattern. This cytokine pattern is known to be more effective in defence against tumours as well as viral infections.
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2003
Sate Hamza; Patricia J. Mercado; Henry Skelton; Kathleen J. Smith
Background: A case of an unusual dematiaceous fungal infection of the skin in a 43‐year‐old man with diabetes mellitus treated with steroids for reactive airway disease is presented. He developed chromoblastomycosis in the left wrist and was treated with antifungals and multiple surgical excisions.
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2004
Marian Northington; Laura Tamburin; Sate Hamza; Hafeez Diwan; Henry Skelton; Kathleen J. Smith
Abstract: Different criteria have been used to define giant basal cell carcinoma (BCC). However, the majority of tumors of 10 cm or greater in diameter have a characteristic clinical and histopathologic presentation. As a group, these tumors often show metastatic spread as opposed to all other BCCs that rarely metastasize. We present an additional patient with a giant BCC greater than 100 cm2. This tumor had a characteristic location and infiltrative growth pattern. Unusual features of this tumor included a lack of expression of BCL‐2 with a greater proportion of cycling tumor cells expressing proliferation markers than conventional BCC, as well as expression of anogenital human papillomaviruses (HPV) subtypes with oncogenic potential. The association of HPV with BCCs has rarely been studied and may not be identical to HPV‐induced genital squamous cell carcinomas. However, the findings in this patient suggest that HPV may play a role in the development of some chronic giant BCCs.
Dermatologic Surgery | 2004
Kathleen J. Smith; Sate Hamza; Henry Skelton
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2004
Craig A. Elmets; Nabiha Yusuf; Sate Hamza; Nasser Iranikakh; Jeffrey Bingham Smith; Andrea L. Volk; Henry Skelton; Kathy Smith
/data/revues/01909622/v50i3sS/S0190962203037319/ | 2011
Jeffery C. Weeks; Sate Hamza; Boni E. Elewski
/data/revues/01909622/v50i3sS/S0190962203035357/ | 2011
Sate Hamza; Naveed Sami; Zlatan Oruc; Anne Bussian
Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2004
Sate Hamza; Naveed Sami; Zlatan Oruc; Anne Bussian
Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2004
Sate Hamza; Naveed Sami; Zlatan Oruc; Anne Bussian
Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2004
Sate Hamza; Boni E. Elewski