Cytogenetic analysis was performed on three specimens of clear cell sarcoma, a rare neoplasm of uncertain histogenesis. Chromosomal analysis of clear cell sarcoma has not been reported previously. Two of the specimens analyzed consisted of the primary foot lesion and subsequent lymph node metastasis in a 29-year-old male. The other specimen was a primary foot lesion in a 61-year-old male. Clonal abnormalities were detected in all three of the specimens. The significance of these results with regard to the origin of this uncommon neoplasm is discussed.
Cytogenetic analysis of a synovial sarcoma of the base of the tongue showed a reciprocal translocation involving chromosomes X and 18 [t(X;18)(p11.2;q11.2)]. This is a translocation recently reported to be characteristic of synovial sarcomas of the extremities. The histogenesis of synovial sarcoma is controversial. Our discovery of this translocation in an oral synovial sarcoma confirms the unity of origin of this neoplasm with the far more common synovial sarcomas of the extremity. Karyotypic analysis may prove useful in confirming the diagnosis of this uncommon neoplasm.
We studied 4,968 cases of prostatic carcinoma to determine if there is a relationship between tumor grade and patient age at diagnosis. Cases were stratified into arbitrary age groups and classified as either better differentiated (Grades I and II) or worse differentiated (Grades III and IV). The 4,596 graded cases were distributed by stage as follows: Local 3,451 (75%), Regional 509 (11%), and Distant 636 (14%). When patients in all stages were considered together, the percentage of men with better differentiated tumors dropped from 77.8% of patients under 60 to 67.5% of patients 80 or older (P less than 0.00001). This trend for older patients to have more poorly differentiated tumors was also seen in patients with localized disease (P less than 0.0005). The fact that occult, biologically inactive prostate cancer is common in older men has led some to extrapolate that clinically apparent disease follows a more benign course in the elderly. Our findings suggest that, on the contrary, elderly men with clinically apparent disease have worse differentiated tumors than their younger counterparts.
The author reviews "the lietmotiv of unresolved dilemmas" in American medical education: the problems of determining the premedical and medical school curricula and of selecting medical students. She offers suggestions for each area, but cautions that there are no simple answers.
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