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The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2005

The 2005 International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) Consensus Conference on Gleason Grading of Prostatic Carcinoma.

Jonathan I. Epstein; William C. Allsbrook; Mahul B. Amin; Lars Egevad; Sheldon Bastacky; Antonio Lòpez Beltran; Aasmund Berner; Athanase Billis; Liliane Boccon-Gibod; Liang Cheng; Francisco Civantos; Cynthia Cohen; Michael B. Cohen; Milton W. Datta; Charles J. Davis; Brett Delahunt; Warick Delprado; John N. Eble; Christopher S. Foster; Masakuni Furusato; Paul B. Gaudin; David J. Grignon; Peter A. Humphrey; Kenneth A. Iczkowski; Edward C. Jones; Scott Lucia; Peter McCue; Tipu Nazeer; Esther Oliva; Chin Chen Pan

Five years after the last prostatic carcinoma grading consensus conference of the International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP), accrual of new data and modification of clinical practice require an update of current pathologic grading guidelines. This manuscript summarizes the proceedings of the ISUP consensus meeting for grading of prostatic carcinoma held in September 2019, in Nice, France. Topics brought to consensus included the following: (1) approaches to reporting of Gleason patterns 4 and 5 quantities, and minor/tertiary patterns, (2) an agreement to report the presence of invasive cribriform carcinoma, (3) an agreement to incorporate intraductal carcinoma into grading, and (4) individual versus aggregate grading of systematic and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging-targeted biopsies. Finally, developments in the field of artificial intelligence in the grading of prostatic carcinoma and future research perspectives were discussed.


Lancet Oncology | 2010

Human papillomavirus genotype attribution in invasive cervical cancer: a retrospective cross-sectional worldwide study

Silvia de Sanjosé; Wim Quint; Laia Alemany; Daan T. Geraets; Jo Ellen Klaustermeier; Belen Lloveras; Sara Tous; Ana Félix; Luis Eduardo Bravo; Hai Rim Shin; Carlos Vallejos; Patricia Alonso de Ruiz; Marcus Aurelho Lima; Núria Guimerà; Omar Clavero; Maria Alejo; Antonio Llombart-Bosch; Chou Cheng-Yang; Silvio Tatti; Elena Kasamatsu; Ermina Iljazovic; Michael Odida; Rodrigo Prado; Muhieddine Seoud; Magdalena Grce; Alp Usubutun; Asha Jain; Gustavo Adolfo Hernandez Suarez; Luis Estuardo Lombardi; Aekunbiola Banjo

BACKGROUND Knowledge about the distribution of human papillomavirus (HPV) genotypes in invasive cervical cancer is crucial to guide the introduction of prophylactic vaccines. We aimed to provide novel and comprehensive data about the worldwide genotype distribution in patients with invasive cervical cancer. METHODS Paraffin-embedded samples of histologically confirmed cases of invasive cervical cancer were collected from 38 countries in Europe, North America, central South America, Africa, Asia, and Oceania. Inclusion criteria were a pathological confirmation of a primary invasive cervical cancer of epithelial origin in the tissue sample selected for analysis of HPV DNA, and information about the year of diagnosis. HPV detection was done by use of PCR with SPF-10 broad-spectrum primers followed by DNA enzyme immunoassay and genotyping with a reverse hybridisation line probe assay. Sequence analysis was done to characterise HPV-positive samples with unknown HPV types. Data analyses included algorithms of multiple infections to estimate type-specific relative contributions. FINDINGS 22,661 paraffin-embedded samples were obtained from 14,249 women. 10,575 cases of invasive cervical cancer were included in the study, and 8977 (85%) of these were positive for HPV DNA. The most common HPV types were 16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 45, 52, and 58 with a combined worldwide relative contribution of 8196 of 8977 (91%, 95% CI 90-92). HPV types 16 and 18 were detected in 6357 of 8977 of cases (71%, 70-72) of invasive cervical cancer. HPV types 16, 18, and 45 were detected in 443 of 470 cases (94%, 92-96) of cervical adenocarcinomas. Unknown HPV types that were identified with sequence analysis were 26, 30, 61, 67, 69, 82, and 91 in 103 (1%) of 8977 cases of invasive cervical cancer. Women with invasive cervical cancers related to HPV types 16, 18, or 45 presented at a younger mean age than did those with other HPV types (50·0 years [49·6-50·4], 48·2 years [47·3-49·2], 46·8 years [46·6-48·1], and 55·5 years [54·9-56·1], respectively). INTERPRETATION To our knowledge, this study is the largest assessment of HPV genotypes to date. HPV types 16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 45, 52, and 58 should be given priority when the cross-protective effects of current vaccines are assessed, and for formulation of recommendations for the use of second-generation polyvalent HPV vaccines. Our results also suggest that type-specific high-risk HPV-DNA-based screening tests and protocols should focus on HPV types 16, 18, and 45.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1994

Small cell carcinoma of the ovary, hypercalcemic type. A clinicopathological analysis of 150 cases

Robert H. Young; Esther Oliva; Robert E. Scully

The clinical and pathological features of 150 cases of ovarian small cell carcinoma of the hypercalcemic type are described. The patients ranged from 9 to 43 (average 23.9) years of age. The serum calcium level was known to be elevated in 49 of the 79 patients (62%) whose preoperative calcium levels were measured. Four of these patients had symptoms of hypercalcemia, and one of them had undergone neck exploration with negative results before the ovarian tumor was discovered. At laparotomy the tumor was unilateral in 148 cases (99%). Extraovarian spread was present in approximately half the cases. The tumors ranged from 6 to 26 (average 15.3) cm in greatest dimension. Microscopic examination disclosed various patterns, the most common of which was diffuse sheets of cells punctured by variable numbers of follicle-like spaces; the tumor cells also grew in nests, cords, clusters, and singly. The follicle-like spaces, which were present in 80% of the cases, contained fluid that was almost always eosinophilic and rarely basophilic. Glands or cysts lined by mucinous epithelial cells were present in 12% of the neoplasms. The neoplastic cells were typically small and round with hyperchromatic nuclei and brisk mitotic activity. Fifty percent of the tumors, however, also had a variable component of cells with moderate to abundant amounts of eosinophilic cytoplasm, which sometimes contained large hyaline globules and large nuclei that were typically paler and had more prominent nucleoli than the small cells. Immunohistochemical staining confirmed the epithelial nature of the tumors, as did electron microscopy, which characteristically showed abundant dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum. Five of seven tumors investigated by immunohistochemical staining for parathyroid hormone-related protein showed positive results. All 23 tumors examined by flow cytometry with interpretable results were diploid. Fourteen of 42 patients (33%) with stage IA disease for whom follow-up information is available remained well and free of disease 1–13 (average 5.7) years postsurgery; 23 died of their disease, usually within 2 years; and five had recurrences but were alive at last follow-up. Almost all the patients with tumors of a stage higher than IA died of disease, but one patient with stage IIB disease who received intensive chemotherapy and radiation therapy is alive and apparently free of disease at 7 years. Features in stage IA tumors that appeared to be associated with a more favorable outcome included an age > 30 years, a normal preoperative calcium determination, a tumor size < 10 cm, and an absence of large cells. The tumors in this series were frequently misinterpreted initially as a variety of other ovarian neoplasms, most commonly adult or juvenile granulosa cell tumors or a primitive germ cell tumor, but the characteristic microscopic features of the small cell carcinoma facilitate its distinction from those tumors and others with which it may be confused. Analysis of the various types of therapy in the present series suggests that a procedure that includes bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy may be optimal for patients with stage IA tumors. The role of adjuvant therapy is unclear. Combination chemotherapy and radiation therapy for high-stage and recurrent tumors has been generally disappointing, but it has occasionally resulted in long-term survival and possible cure.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2002

An immunohistochemical analysis of endometrial stromal and smooth muscle tumors of the uterus: a study of 54 cases emphasizing the importance of using a panel because of overlap in immunoreactivity for individual antibodies.

Esther Oliva; Robert H. Young; Mahul B. Amin; Philip B. Clement

The expression of desmin, h-caldesmon, calponin, CD10, CD34, CD99, inhibin, and keratin (AE1/3-Cam 5.2) was studied in 10 conventional leiomyomas, 9 highly cellular leiomyomas, 9 epithelioid smooth muscle tumors, 9 leiomyosarcomas, 10 endometrial stromal tumors (4 with smooth muscle metaplasia), and 7 uterine tumors resembling ovarian sex cord tumors (UTROSCTs). c-kit expression was tested in 10 endometrial stromal tumors, 7 UTROSCTs, and 9 leiomyosarcomas. Desmin was positive in almost all smooth muscle tumors except those of epithelioid type, which were positive in only about half of the cases. It also stained areas of smooth muscle differentiation in endometrial stromal tumors and five of seven UTROSCTs. h-caldesmon was positive in almost all nonepithelioid smooth muscle tumors and in areas of smooth muscle differentiation in endometrial stromal tumors; it was positive in only about half of the epithelioid smooth muscle tumors and negative in all UTROSCTs. Calponin was positive in most tumor types. CD10 was positive in nine of 10 endometrial stromal tumors and five of seven UTROSCTs, although very focally in the latter group. It was also expressed, however, in almost all leiomyosarcomas, almost 50% of highly cellular leiomyomas, and rarely in the other smooth muscle tumors. CD34 was negative in the tested tumors with rare exceptions. CD99 and inhibin were positive in four of seven and one of seven UTROSCTs. Keratin positivity was found in most (five of seven) UTROSCTs and occasionally in smooth muscle tumors (seven of 37). c-kit was negative in all endometrial stromal tumors, UTROSCTs, and leiomyosarcomas. The major conclusions of this study are as follows: 1) Pure endometrial stromal tumors are usually desmin negative. 2) In contrast to some previous studies, CD10 expression was often seen in smooth muscle tumors, including most leiomyosarcomas and almost half of highly cellular leiomyomas. As a result, a panel of CD10, h-caldesmon, and desmin should be used and will distinguish endometrial stromal tumors from highly cellular leiomyomas in most cases. 3) In contrast to a previous study, no significant differences in immunoreactivity were seen between h-caldesmon and desmin in tumors with smooth muscle differentiation. 4) The absence of h-caldesmon in UTROSCTs helps separate them from epithelioid smooth muscle tumors. 5) UTROSCTs may express epithelial, stromal, and smooth muscle markers, suggesting divergent differentiation. 6) Our study shows less frequent inhibin expression in the sex cord-like elements of the UTROSCTs than in other studies. 7) c-kit may help distinguish metastatic endometrial stromal tumors of the uterus (c-kit negative) from gastrointestinal stromal tumors (c-kit positive). 8) CD34, CD99, and keratin have no or minimal role in this area, but keratin positivity in smooth muscle tumors should not lead to their confusion with epithelial tumors.


The Journal of Pathology | 2011

Micro-RNA signature of the epithelial–mesenchymal transition in endometrial carcinosarcoma†

María Ángeles Castilla; Gema Moreno-Bueno; Laura Romero-Pérez; Koen K. Van de Vijver; Michele Biscuola; María Ángeles López-García; Jaime Prat; Xavier Matias-Guiu; Amparo Cano; Esther Oliva; José Palacios

Endometrial carcinosarcomas (ECSs) undergo a true epithelial‐mesenchymal transition (EMT). The molecular determinants of the EMT in vivo are unclear, although a role for some miRNAs, mainly involving the miR‐200 family, was recently suggested from in vitro cellular models. We analysed the microRNA (miRNA) signatures associated to EMT in human carcinosarcomas, and determined their relationships with EMT markers and repressors of E‐cadherin transcription. The expression of E‐, P‐ and N‐cadherin, cadherin‐11, p120, vimentin, SPARC, fascin and caveolin‐1 was studied in a group of 76 ECS by immunohistochemistry. In addition, real‐time PCR was used to measure the differences in the expression of 384 miRNAs, E‐cadherin, cadherin‐11, SPARC, SNAIL, ZEB1, ZEB2, TWIST‐1, TCF4, TGFβ1 and TGFβ2 between the epithelial and mesenchymal components of 23 ECSs. A loss of epithelial characteristics, including cadherin switching and the acquisition of a mesenchymal phenotype, was accompanied by changes in the profile of miRNA expression and the up‐regulation of all the E‐cadherin repressors analysed. A greater than five‐fold difference in the expression of 14 miRNAs between both neoplastic components was seen. Members of the miR‐200 family were down‐regulated in the mesenchymal part of the ECS. In addition, miR‐23b and miR‐29c, which are involved in the inhibition of mesenchymal markers, and miR‐203, which is involved in the inhibition of cell stemness, were also down‐regulated. Up‐regulated miRNAs included miR‐155, miR‐369‐5p, miR‐370, miR‐450a and miR‐542‐5p. These data suggest that in human ECS, the interplay between transcriptional repressors of E‐cadherin and miRNAs provides a link between EMT‐activation and the maintenance of stemness. Copyright


Advances in Anatomic Pathology | 2000

Endometrial stromal tumors: an update on a group of tumors with a protean phenotype.

Esther Oliva; Philip B. Clement; Robert H. Young

Summary: Endometrial stromal tumors are reviewed with emphasis on their wide morphologic spectrum and problems in differential diagnosis, highlighting issues that have received particular attention in the recent literature. These neoplasms are divided into two major categories—endometrial stromal nodules and endometrial stromal sarcomas—a distinction made on the basis of the lack of significant infiltration at the periphery of the former. The division of endometrial stromal sarcomas into low‐grade and high‐grade categories has fallen out of favor and the designation endometrial stromal sarcoma is now considered best restricted to neoplasms that were formally referred to as “low‐grade” stromal sarcoma. Endometrial sarcomas without recognizable evidence of a definite endometrial stromal phenotype, designated poorly differentiated “endometrial sarcomas,” are almost invariably high grade and often resemble the mesenchymal component of a malignant mullerian mixed tumor. Two features of endometrial stromal tumors that may cause confusion are smooth muscle differentiation and epithelial patterns. Cases in the former category often have a characteristic “starburst” pattern of collagen formation. The most common epithelial patterns resemble those seen in ovarian sex‐cord stromal tumors. Much less common is endometrioid gland differentiation. Some endometrial stromal tumors have a prominent fibrous or myxoid appearance and the myxoid tumors should be distinguished from myxoid leiomyosarcoma. Other unusual features of endometrial stromal tumors are also discussed. Lesions in the differential diagnosis of uterine endometrial stromal neoplasms include highly cellular leiomyoma, cellular intravenous leiomyomatosis, adenomyosis with sparse glands, metastatic carcinoma, and lymphoma. Endometrial stromal sarcomas at extrauterine sites may be primary or metastatic from a uterine tumor, the latter sometimes being occult and difficult to definitively establish, particularly if there is a history of a remote hysterectomy for “leiomyomas.” Endometrial stromal sarcomas of the ovary, whether primary or metastatic, may be difficult to distinguish from ovarian sex‐cord stromal tumors. Extragenital endometrial stromal sarcomas may be confused with diverse lesions such as gastrointestinal stromal tumors, hemangiopericytoma, lymphangiomyomatosis, or mesenchymal cystic hamartoma of the lung. Immunohistochemistry may play a role in evaluating these tumors and in some instances establishing the diagnosis although conventional light microscopic analysis suffices in the majority of cases. The unusual tumor, the “uterine tumor resembling an ovarian sex‐cord tumor,” is also considered in this review as it is almost certainly of endometrial stromal derivation in many cases. These neoplasms may have a striking resemblance to granulosa cell tumors or Sertoli cell tumors, including those with a retiform pattern, and have recently been shown to be frequently inhibin positive.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2003

Potential utility of uroplakin III, thrombomodulin, high molecular weight cytokeratin, and cytokeratin 20 in noninvasive, invasive, and metastatic urothelial (transitional cell) carcinomas.

Douglas C. Parker; Andrew L. Folpe; Julie Bell; Esther Oliva; Robert H. Young; Cynthia Cohen; Mahul B. Amin

The morphology of urothelial carcinomas, particularly when poorly differentiated or in metastatic sites, is not distinctive and overlaps significantly with other poorly differentiated nonurothelial carcinomas. Currently, there is no widely used single marker or panel of markers to confirm urothelial origin. We evaluated a panel consisting of antibodies to uroplakin III (UROIII), thrombomodulin (THR), high molecular weight cytokeratin (HMWCK), and cytokeratin 20 (CK20) in a wide range of urothelial tumors. Immunohistochemistry was performed on 112 paraffin-embedded urothelial neoplasms: 14 low malignant potential, 16 low-grade noninvasive, 16 high-grade noninvasive, 36 invasive, and 25 metastatic and 5 small cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder. Tissue microarray analysis was used to examine 498 tissue cores of nonurothelial tumors and normal tissue using antibodies to UROIII, THR, and HMWCK. Overall positive staining results in all urothelial tumors are as follows: UROIII, 64 of 112 (57.1%); THR, 77 of 112 (68.8%); HMWCK, 88 of 110 (80%); and CK20, 53 of 110 (48.2%). The expression of the four markers varied with tumor grade and stage. All small cell carcinomas were negative for all markers. Variant morphologic subtypes showed similar staining as conventional urothelial carcinomas. Tissue microarray analysis showed no UROIII immunoreactivity in tissue cores of nonurothelial tumors. THR was expressed by a limited number of nonurothelial cores (10 of 37 [27%] non-small cell lung carcinomas, 2 of 36 [5.6%] lymphomas). HMWCK was expressed by 43.8% of non-small cell lung carcinomas and essentially absent in other nonurothelial tumor cores. Based on the results of the study, the expression of UROIII in a tumor is essentially diagnostic of urothelial origin; however, it is expressed in only slightly more than half of urothelial tumors. The coexpression of THR, HMWCK, and CK20 strongly suggests urothelial origin. The coexpression of two of three non-UROIII markers (THR, HMWCK, CK20) suggests urothelial origin but requires clinicopathologic correlation. The results of the study indicate a role for an antibody panel that includes UROIII, THR, HMWCK, and CK20 in the diagnosis of urothelial tumors.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2009

A limited panel of immunomarkers can reliably distinguish between clear cell and high-grade serous carcinoma of the ovary.

Martin Köbel; Steve E. Kalloger; Jon Carrick; David Huntsman; Haider Asad; Esther Oliva; Carol A. Ewanowich; Robert A. Soslow; C. Blake Gilks

The distinction of ovarian clear cell carcinomas (CCCs) from high-grade serous carcinomas (HG-SCs) is sometimes a diagnostic challenge. With the recognition that CCCs respond poorly to conventional chemotherapy there are efforts to initiate clinical trials for CCC, making accurate diagnosis critical. The purpose of this study was to test and validate a set of antibodies that could aid in the diagnosis of CCC, using a series of cases from different centers in North America. Using a test set of 133 CCCs, we identified the following markers: Cyclin E, estrogen receptor, hepatocyte nuclear factor (HNF)-1β, Ki-67, p21, p53, and Wilms tumor (WT)1 that show significant discrimination from 200 HG-SCs. For validation, these markers were characterized on an independent set of 104 CCCs from 3 other centers. There were no significant differences in expression of these 7 markers between the independent test and validation sets of CCC. Combining all CCC cases (N=237), HNF-1β showed the highest sensitivity (82.5%) and specificity (95.2%) for CCC, and WT1 for HG-SC (sensitivity: 79.9%, specificity: 97.4%). A diagnostic panel consisting of WT1, ER, and HNF-1β demonstrated nearly identical performance as a panel using all 7 markers in distinguishing CCCs from HG-SCs, correctly classifying 84% of cases. Three percent of cases were misclassified and 13% carried an uninformative triple negative immunophenotype. CCCs show a distinct, reproducible immunophenotype, compared with HG-SCs, and a panel of 3 immunomarkers can serve as a diagnostic aid in problematic cases.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2007

Cystic nephroma and mixed epithelial and stromal tumor of kidney: a detailed clinicopathologic analysis of 34 cases and proposal for renal epithelial and stromal tumor (REST) as a unifying term.

Julia Turbiner; Mahul B. Amin; Peter A. Humphrey; John R. Srigley; Laurence de Leval; Anuradha Radhakrishnan; Esther Oliva

Cystic nephroma (CN) and mixed epithelial and stromal tumor (MEST) are rare benign renal neoplasms that have overlapping clinical and morphologic features, including predominance in middle-aged women, variably cystic architecture, eosinophilic cells, and hobnail cells lining the cysts and ovarian-type stroma. The aim of this study was to analyze and compare the histologic features and immunohistochemical profile of these tumors. We studied 34 cases from 5 large academic institutions. Twenty tumors were diagnosed as CNs, 18 in women and 2 in men, their age ranged from 24 to 63 (mean 48; median 50) years. Fourteen tumors were diagnosed as MESTs, all in women, their age ranged from 26 to 84 (mean 52; median 51) years. Histologically, all tumors were well-circumscribed except for one MEST. The stromal/epithelial ratio was approximately 2.3 in MESTs versus 0.3 in CNs; cellular ovarian-type stroma composed 45% of the stroma in MESTs and 12% of the stroma of CNs. Stromal hyalinization was prominent in both. Five MESTs showed stromal luteinization. In the epithelial component, the relative amount of large cysts, medium to small cysts, and phyllodes-type glands was: 65%/25%/10% in CNs versus 25%/40%/35% in MESTs. The epithelial component ranged from flat to cuboidal to hobnail cells in both types of tumors. No significant atypia of either component was seen, although the epithelial cells showed reactive changes. Immunohistochemical stains for estrogen receptors and progesterone receptors showed 62% and 85% positivity in the stromal component of MESTs versus 19% and 40% in CNs. CD10 positivity was seen in 77% of MESTs versus 50% of CNs, calretinin was seen in 69% of MESTs versus 41% of CNs, and inhibin in 42% of MESTs versus 36% of CNs, although the staining was focal. Follow-up in both categories of tumors (mean 3.2 y, median 3 y for CNs and mean 2.5 y, median of 2 y for MESTs) showed no evidence of recurrence or metastases in keeping with their benign nature. This study highlights the remarkable similarity between CN and MEST in sex predilection, age distribution, and morphologic attributes of both the epithelial and stromal components and immunohistochemical profile albeit with variation in individual categories with higher prevalence of stromal to epithelial ratio, prominent ovarian stroma, smaller cysts with phyllodes glands pattern and stromal luteinization being more common in MEST; and large cysts, thin septae and low stromal to epithelial ratio in CN. The presence of ovarian-type stroma and müllerian related immunohistochemical markers raises the possibility that these tumors may originate from müllerian remnants misplaced during embryogenesis. On the basis of detailed morphologic analysis of this series of CN and MEST, we propose a unifying term of “renal epithelial and stromal tumor” (REST) to encompass the spectrum of findings observed in these tumors at least until new molecular studies can prove or disprove this challenging hypothesis.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2007

Clinicopathologic analysis of 187 high-grade endometrial carcinomas of different histologic subtypes: similar outcomes belie distinctive biologic differences.

Robert A. Soslow; John P. Bissonnette; Andrew Wilton; Kaled M. Alektiar; Linda R. Duska; Esther Oliva

The clinical and histopathologic features of 187 high-grade endometrial cancers [FIGO grade 3 endometrioid (EC-3), serous (SC), and clear cell (CC)] were studied to determine whether clinicopathologic differences between these various histologic subtypes existed. The study group consisted of 89 EC-3s, 61 SCs, and 37 CCs. Treatment regimens were individualized. SCs and CCs were significantly more likely than EC-3s to occur in patients older than 65 years (P=0.03), and SCs tended to occur more frequently in patients of African descent than EC-3s and CCs (P=0.07), although this was not statistically significant. EC-3s had the highest rate of associated endometrial hyperplasia (P=0.05). SCs were most likely to have high-stage disease at presentation (≥stage IIB; P=0.01), with peritoneal dissemination at diagnosis being much more common compared with EC-3s and CCs (P=0.004). Median follow-up was 39 months, and median overall survival was 47 months. Five-year survivals were 45% (EC-3), 36% (SC), and 50% (CC)—differences that were not statistically significant. In contrast, the impact of stage on survival was significant (P<0.001). Among all other factors evaluated, only age greater than 65 years was a negative predictor (risk ratio, 2.23; P<0.001), whereas a family history of cancer reduced the risk of death when controlling for stage (risk ratio, 0.54; P=0.005). When controlling for stage, race, reproductive history, personal history of cancer, histologic subtype, depth of myometrial invasion, lymphovascular invasion, presence of an endometrial polyp, presence of hyperplasia, or staging adequacy did not affect prognosis. High-grade endometrial cancers of different histologic subtypes treated in an individualized manner are associated with similar clinical outcomes, but differences in age at presentation, race distribution, association with hyperplasia, stage, and sites of tumor dissemination support the idea that these represent distinct disease entities as defined by traditional histopathologic classification of endometrial cancers.

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Robert A. Soslow

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Roberto Latagliata

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marisa R. Nucci

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Giuliana Alimena

Sapienza University of Rome

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Massimo Breccia

Sapienza University of Rome

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Jaime Prat

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Mahul B. Amin

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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