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| Adenocarcinoma of Cervix | ||
| Etiology Associated with human papilloma virus infection, especially type 18. Account for up to 10% of carcinomas of the cervix | ||
| Pathogenesis integration into host genome of HPV with inactivation of p53 area of active research, | ||
| Epidemiology sexually transmitted disease particularly affecting young women increased in cigarette smokers age peak at 40-45 but dropping women who have never had a pap smear or have not had one in 5 years | ||
| General Gross Description may be fungating, may be ulcerated but often deeply infiltrative cut surfaces gray white, hard, poorly circumscribed necrosis and hemorrhage common Examples: | ||
| General Microscopic Description composed of glands with cells containing mucin vacuoles nuclei are round to oval, hyperchromatic, and have prominent nucleoli Examples: | ||
| Clinical Correlation often detected later than squamous carcinoma because location makes pap smear screening more difficult comparable outcome to squamous carcinoma stage for stage early stage disease treated with surgery alone; late stage with radiation | ||
| References Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 1053. Please be patient during transfer. Medline will open in a new window. To return, close the Medline Window Adenocarcinoma of Cervix
| Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T83000M81403)[276]
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