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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1958 to 1969 conizations for
carcinoma in situ
of the uterine cervix were carried out in 683 women. In 523 cases no further therapy was instituted immediately. Step serial sections of the conization specimens showed that
carcinoma in situ
was completely removed in 346 (66.2%) of the cases. In 177 (33.8%) of the cases, the excision of the atypical epithelium was incomplete or not with certainty complete, by the conization. Of these patients 43 women were older than 45 years. Follow-up examinations after conization with complete removal of all atypical epithelium showed that only one case showed again a pathological epithelium. In this case, hysterectomy for an adnexal
tumor
four years after conization showed a mild dysplasia of the endocervix. Follow-up examination of the cases with incomplete or possibly incomplete conization showed no further pathological finding in 90% of the cases. In 19 (10.7%) of the women, atypical epithelium reappeared after varying lengths of follow-up. In 4 women, invasive carcinoma had developed and in 2 women, microinvasive carcinoma had developed. Following operative treatment, further follow-up examinations in these patients were negative. Conization of the uterine cervix with complete removal of all atypical epithelium is shown to be adequate treatment for
carcinoma in situ
. In cases with incomplete or not with certainty complete removal of atypical tissue by conization, individual follow-up is necessary. If further pregnancies are desired the small risk of observation is justifiable. Diagnosed persistence of atypical epithelium is an indication for a hysterectomy. Hysterectomies are also necessary if the patient does not comply adequately with the follow-up protocol.
...
PMID:[Results of the conservative management of carcinoma in situ of the uterine cervix by conization (author's transl)]. 97 3
At the University Department in Heidelberg 58 micro-invasive carcinomas of the uterine cervix were found between 1965 and 1974. 8 cases were diagnosed in other institutions by directed biopsies. Three cases were detected during the microscopic examination of uteri removed for emergency indications and three cases were detected after hysterectomy for cytological findings indicative of
carcinoma in situ
of the uterine cervix. In 44 cases an optimal conization of the cervix was carried out. Microscopic examination of these cases showed early stromal invasion in 33 cases. In 6 cases a newtork infiltration was found und in 5 cases a plump infiltration was found. The incidence of radical Wertheim operations of 21 in this group is explained by cases in this group who had inadequate diagnosis prior to admission. In 8 cases the indication for the Wertheim radical hysterectomy was a carcinomatous lymphangiosis in the conization specimen. In none of these cases metastatic
tumor
was found in the lymph nodes although 13 to 44 lymph nodes were examined per case. In accordance with the newer literature it is recommended to limit treatment of micro-invasive changes of the uterine cervix to routine hysterectomy or to optimal conization of the cervix if certain prerequisites are met. The results of the follow-up examinations of the reported cases appear to justify this recommendation.
...
PMID:[Adequate treatment of micro-invasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix (author's transl)]. 97 4
We evaluated 129 patients with low grade, low stage transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder with a minimum followup of 5 years. In addition to the phenomena recognized as indicators of a serious clinical problem (grade greater than I, rapid recurrence, multiple tumors and lamina propria invasion) the identification of
carcinoma in situ
and/or atypia in normal, incidentally resected mucosa adjacent to the
tumor
was found to be a positive predictor for subsequent muscle invasion. Ten of 12 patients with
carcinoma in situ
and 9 of 25 patients with atypia were among 39 who experienced invasion.
...
PMID:Non-invasive papillary carcinoma of the bladder associated with carcinoma in situ. 97 9
The occurrence of columnar epithelium in the vagina (vaginal adenosis) in young women with intrauterine exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES) during the first trimester of pregnancy was observed in 231 patients (82 per cent of 280 cases who underwent colposcopic study). Extension of columnar epithelium onto the portio of the cervix was present in the remaining 18 per cent of the cases. Abnormal colposcopic findings were present in the transformation zone in 96 per cent of the patients with vaginal adenosis. Directed biopsy revealed four cases of vaginal and/or cervical squamous
carcinoma in situ
(
CIS
), two cases of severe dysplasia, five cases of moderate, and 29 cases of mild dysplasia. The prevalence of
CIS
in DES-exposed girls (1.4 per cent) was nearly five times the prevalence rate of
CIS
in a control group of 5,808 DES-unexposed women (0.44 per cent). This finding correlates well with the hypothesis that the genesis of squamous intraepithelial
neoplasia
is specifically related to the extent and surface area of the vaginal transformation zone. An unusual case of invasive squamous carcinoma in a DES-exposed young girl is presented, which represents the initial observation of this association to date.
...
PMID:Cancer risk in diethylstilbestrol-exposed offspring. 98 24
The Connecticut
Tumor
Registry recorded 5,781 women with
carcinoma in situ
(
CIS
) and 7,614 with invasive cervical cancer from 1935 to 1973. True incidence rates for invasive disease were calculated.
CIS
rates indicated newly diagnosed cases, but true
CIS
incidence is unknown. Starting in 1945-49, the incidence of invasive cervical declined about 20% in Connecticut before
CIS
screening could have influenced the disease to that extent. Continuing declines in invasive disease rates after 1955 in Connecticut were probably attributable largely to screening. The persistent occurrence of invasive disease in screened populations and the rapid progression of cancer, with early death among some women with apparently localized disease at diagnosis, suggested that a second class of invasive cervical cancer may exist. Cancers in this class may develop and progress rapidly without a practical possibility of detection in the premalignant stage by cytologic methods. Other screening methods, e.g., metabolic, hormonal, immunologic, or virologic, may be required to control this disease.
...
PMID:Uterine cervical carcinoma in Connecticut, 1935-1973: evidence for two classes of invasive disease. 100 40
In a group of 184 women infected with Corynebacterium vaginale (Haemophilus vaginalis), 34% over age 30 were divorced or separated and 8% gave a history of induced abortion. Fifty-one percent were taking an oral contraceptive drug, as compared to 36% of 140 women in a control group. Various sexually transmitted diseases were diagnosed either concomitantly or at another time in 52% of women in the study group and 38% of those in the control group. The rate of cervical
neoplasia
(invasive carcinoma,
carcinoma in situ
, and dysplasia) was 13.6% in the study group and 5.7% in the control group, the rate in the study group being several times that in the general population. These and other available epidemiologic data support the conclusion that C vainale is transmitted sexually.
...
PMID:Epidemiologic characteristics of women infected with Corynebacterium vaginale (Haemophilus vainalis). 108 35
Data from a Colposcopy Clinic have been presented in which endocervical and cervical smears were evaluated in singly and in combination for accuracy and effectiveness. In patients with marked dysplasia,
carcinoma in situ
and early invasive cancer, false negative results rarely occurred using either cervical or endocervical smears; more false negatives were encountered in the minimal to moderate dysplasia group of lesions. Endocervical smears were found to be unreliable in determining the distribution of cervical
neoplasia
when correlated with endocervical curettage specimens. These smears contributed little as supplemental screening procedures for early cervical
neoplasia
since less procedures for early cervical
neoplasia
since less than three per cent of lesions would have been missed had only a cervical scrape smear been performed. It should be pointed out, however, that this was a young population in which cervical eversion with exposure of endocervical tissue and the neoplastic lesions was the rule. The accuracy of endocervical aspiration and endocervical swab techniques was similar although there was a much higher proportion of unsatisfactory specimens with the dry cotton swab technique.
...
PMID:The contribution of endocervical smears to cervical cancer detection. 109 15
Recent studies concerning the role of an angiogenic factor in cancer have produced a renewed interest in vascular studies of the cervix. Colposcopic and histochemical vascular studies demonstrate changes in the vascular pattern of cervical
neoplasia
which progress from early dysplasia to
carcinoma in situ
. There is a restructuring of the terminal vascular network of the pre-existing columnar epithelium in noninvasive cervical
neoplasia
which is caused by compression of the capillaries by the epithelial proliferation. In contrast, neovascularization is observed in those cases of
carcinoma in situ
which will progress to invasive cancer. The position is taken that this process of neovascularization, which is recognized by the development of horizontal vessels, may be the direct effect of an angiogenic factor. Evidence is also presented that the initial vascular changes may precede the histopathologic criteria of cervical
neoplasia
.
...
PMID:Angiogenesis of cervical neoplasia. 111 92
A retrospective study has been carried out on 25 patients treated at the University of Michigan Medical Center for
carcinoma in situ
of the vagina.
Intraepithelial carcinoma
of the vagina occurred as a primary entity, following treatment for preinvasive and invasive carcinoma of the cervix, and following hysterectomy for benign disease of the uterus. These patients were treated with either radium implantation or some form of surgery. Five patients had recurrences. These 5 were all subsequently retreated and are alive and without evidence of further recurrent
neoplasm
. This series of
carcinoma in situ
of the vagina is compared to other reported series. Emphasis is directed toward the need for continued use of Papanicolaou smear cytology tests in posthysterectomy patients, regardless of the reason for hysterectomy.
...
PMID:Carcinoma in situ of the vagina. A study and review. 116 Dec 40
Fibroblasts underlying human uterine cervical dysplasia,
carcinoma in situ
, and invasive carcinoma are agglutinable by concanavalin A (Con A) but not by wheat germ agglutinin, except at very high concentration. Studies with low levels of Con A show that maximal agglutination is obtained with fibroblasts from invasive carcinoma, while the fibroblasts underlying dysplasia give minimal agglutination reactions. Fibroblasts underlying
carcinoma in situ
give agglutination reactions halfway between those obtained with fibroblasts underlying dysplasia and invasive carcinoma. An epithelial-like cell line obtained from a case of dysplasia shows agglutinability by Con A very similar to that obtained with fibroblasts underlying dysplasia. These epithelial-like cells are also not agglutinable by wheat germ agglutinin. Treatment of the cervical cells, both epithelial and fibroblasts, with neuraminidase leads to slight increase in agglutination by both Con A and wheat germ agglutinin. Marked increase in agglutination is not obtained even after treatment with high concentration of neuraminidase (10 units/10(6) cells). Marked agglutinability, however, is observed after trypsin treatment. The results suggest that, while the fibroblasts obtained from normal cervix are not agglutinable by Con A, surface alterations necessary for Con A-specific agglutination exist in fibroblasts during the early stage of development of uterine cervical epithelial
neoplasia
(dysplasia) and increase with the progression through
carcinoma in situ
to invasive carcinoma. Loss of cell surface sialic acids may result in a slight increase in agglutinability, but some other mechanism(s) is likely to be involved in alteration of surface properties that lead to marked agglutinability of the human uterine cervical cells obtained from cancer precursor lesions.
...
PMID:Different agglutinability of fibroblasts underlying various precursor lesions of human uterine cervical carcinoma. 117 Sep 43
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