BACKGROUNDThe Bethesda System for reporting the results of cervical cytology was developed as a uniform system of terminology that would provide clear guidance for clinical management.
The S-phase fraction (SP) measured by flow cytometry of DNA and the thymidine labeling index (TLI) measured autoradiographically indicate the proportion of carcinoma cells currently synthesizing DNA and reflect the rate of proliferation. The TLI and SPF are lognormally distributed. The median TLI performed to maximize precursor uptake is near 5% (5 labeled carcinoma cells per 100) the mean near 7%, and the range from less than 1% to near 40%. Corresponding values for the SPF measured by DNA flow cytometry are slightly higher when appropriate measures are taken to reduce background debris counts and other artefacts. Residual elevation of SPF above TLI may result from S-phase arrested cells. Flow cytometric histograms show that clearly aneuploid cell lines exist in 50-80% of primary breast carcinomas. Aneuploid breast carcinomas have higher mean TLI than diploid breast carcinomas, and therefore proliferate more rapidly. They also more frequently lack estrogen receptor (ER). Carcinomas with minimal nuclear anaplasia, particularly those of tubular, mucinous, infiltrating lobular and adenocystic types have low TLI and SPF, whereas carcinomas with highly anaplastic nuclei, including medullary carcinomas, have high TLI and SPF. TLI and SPF correlate inversely with ER and PgR content, have no relationship to axillary lymph nodal status, and have a weak positive correlation with tumor size and a weak negative correlation with age. High TLI predicts a high risk of early relapse after primary therapy for both node-negative and node-positive carcinomas. Carcinomas that produce brain metastases have particularly high TLI. Current evidence suggests that high SPF and aneuploidy may prove to have prognostic significance like TLI.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.