Pathology of carcinoma in situ of the urinary bladder and related lesions
β Scribed by George M. Farrow
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 477 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0730-2312
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β¦ Synopsis
In the United States, nearly all cases of bladder cancer are of the transitional cell type, and epidemiological evidence indicates that among these, approximately 80% present initially as more or less well-differentiated, superficial papillary neoplasms with a tendency for multifocal or diffuse involvement of the urothelial surface and/or recurrent tumor episodes, but with limited potential for invasive growth or a lethal outcome. Bladder tumors with lethal potential generally begin as poorly differentiated, sessile growths that are usually invasive at first diagnosis. Carcinoma in situ is a change that must be elicited among intact surface cells before progressive proliferation results in a tumor mass. Evidence for such an association is both temporal and spatial. Since most transitional cell carcinomas begin as well-differentiated tumors, i.e., resembling normal urothelium, recognition of early neoplastic alteration before a papillary structure forms is unlikely and most of the evidence is spatial based upon urothelial changes adjacent to papillary tumors. The morphologic definition of carcinoma in situ is arbitrary and generally defined as a total replacement of the urothelial surface by cells which bear morphologic features of carcinoma, but which lack architectural alteration other than an increase in the number of cell layers, i.e., a flat lesion. The Union InternationΓ‘le Contra Cancer/American Joint Committee on Cancer (UICC/AJCC) staging scheme for bladder cancer distinguishes non-invasive papillary growths as Ta and carcinoma in situ as Tis. Because detection of carcinoma in situ, either by cytology or biopsy, depends upon recognizable malignant morphologic characteristics, studies of the lesion tend to be limited to the higher grade or more anaplastic examples.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## BACKGROUND. To the authors' knowledge, the long term follow-up of patients with carcinoma in situ of the urinary bladder is limited. ## METHODS. The authors studied 138 patients diagnosed with urothelial carcinoma in situ of the bladder at the Mayo Clinic between 1972-1979. All the histologi
In the 1998 World Health Organization and International Society of Urologic Pathology (WHO/ISUP) classification system for bladder neoplasms, flat intraepithelial lesions of the urinary bladder were categorized as reactive atypia, atypia of unknown significance, dysplasia, and carcinoma in situ. The