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Gewählte Publikation:

Tosi, P; Luzi, P; Sforza, V; Santopietro, R; Vindigni, C; Miracco, C; Baak, JP; Smolle, J; Barbini, P.
The nuclei in cutaneous malignant melanoma, stage I, are smaller in survivors than in non-survivors.
Pathol Res Pract. 1989; 185(5):625-630 Doi: 10.1016/S0344-0338(89)80207-9
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Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
Smolle Josef
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Abstract:
Cutaneous melanoma, stage I, from 35 survivors at 5 year follow-up and 16 non-survivors were studied. Mean nuclear area in the superficial layer was significantly larger than in the deep layer both in survivors and non-survivors, but the ratio between nuclear area in superficial and deep layers (so-called maturation index) did not differ between survivors and non-survivors. In comparison with the survivors, the mean nuclear area of non-survivors was significantly larger both in the superficial (51.1 microns2 vs 43.7 microns2, p less than 0.01) and deep (42.9 microns2 vs 36.4 microns2, p less than 0.05) layer. This points to a general increase in nuclear areas in metastasizing tumors. Furthermore, the coefficient of variation of nuclear area [(standard deviation/mean) x 100] was not different between survivors and non-survivors, either in the superficial or in the deep layer. Inspection of histograms of areas of 1000-2000 nuclei per case in 20 random cases (10 survivors and 10 non-survivors) showed a homogeneous increase in nuclear area in non-survivors. None of the histograms revealed a cell clone with especially large nuclei. These data show that the increased mean nuclear area in non-survivors is due to a homogeneous increase of all nuclei throughout the tumor and not to a special cell clone with large nuclei within nuclei of otherwise normal size. The difference in mean nuclear area in superficial and deep layers indicates that careful selection of nuclei in either of these layers is essential to obtain reproducible and comparable results with interactive morphometry.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Cell Nucleus - pathology
Follow-Up Studies - pathology
Humans - pathology
Melanoma - mortality
Prognosis - mortality
Skin Neoplasms - mortality
Survival Rate - mortality

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