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  • Title: Problematic uterine smooth muscle neoplasms. A clinicopathologic study of 213 cases.
    Author: Bell SW, Kempson RL, Hendrickson MR.
    Journal: Am J Surg Pathol; 1994 Jun; 18(6):535-58. PubMed ID: 8179071.
    Abstract:
    A recent trend in the classification of uterine smooth muscle neoplasms (USMNs) into clinically benign and clinically malignant groups has been to move from exclusive reliance upon mitotic index (MI) to an approach that incorporates additional histopathologic characteristics. In furtherance of this goal, we assessed a variety of histopathologic features of 213 problematic smooth muscle neoplasms for which we had > or = 2 years of clinical follow-up data or for which there was an unfavorable outcome. One hundred and thirteen of these patients have had a minimum follow-up of 5 years, and 48 have been followed for > or = 10 years. Cases eliminated from the study group included USMNs with a significant myxoid or epithelioid component and cases of intravenous leiomyomatosis. USMNs, whether cellular or not, with no cytologic atypia and with a mitotic index (MI = number of mitotic figures [mf]/10 high-power fields [hpf]) of < 5 mf/10 hpf (usual leiomyomas) were also excluded unless they had unusual features or were associated with an adverse clinical outcome. Fifty-six patients were initially treated by myomectomy or another form of local tumor removal; the remainder had a hysterectomy. From a wide variety of light microscopic features assessed, the important predictors that emerged, using a variety of data exploratory techniques, were MI, the degree of cytologic atypia, and the presence or absence of coagulative tumor cell necrosis (CTCN). Stratification of the USMNs with respect to these three features resulted in a five-group classification of USMNs with the following major characteristics. Group 1: Of the 89 USMNs with an MI in the range 5 < or = MI < 20 without CTCN and with no more than mild atypia, 88 were clinically benign. One patient with a tumor in this group died of metastatic disease 96 months after her uterine cervical primary neoplasm was removed. Combining our data with that in the literature, the failure rate in this group is approximately 1/200 (0.5%). This low failure rate warrants the use of the label "leiomyoma with increased mitotic index" for USMNs with these histologic features. Two patients whose USMNs were characterized by mild atypia, no necrosis, and MI < 5 developed identical-appearing pulmonary metastases and were judged in retrospect to have the syndrome "benign metastasizing leiomyoma." Group 2: USMNs with no CTCN and diffuse moderate to severe atypia fell into two groups based on the MI. For those patients whose neoplasms had an MI > or = 10 mf/10 hpf, four of 10 failed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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