Abstract

The DNA distribution pattern was determined by cytofluorometry in 25 cases of colorectal small carcinoma and the so-called severe dysplasia. The colorectal carcinoma and "severe dysplasia" consisted of four principal stemlines as to DNA ploidy: diploidy, aneuploidy, and their respective polyploidies. These patterns appeared in various combinations in individual neoplasms. DNA distribution of the severe dysplasia was diploid-predominant (11 cases) or aneuploid-predominant (three cases), usually showing mosaicism in various degrees with respective first order polyploidy. Similar DNA distribution patterns also were found in submucosally invasive small carcinomas. The neoplastic cell populations of a higher polyploidy (second or third order), however, occurred only in the submucosally invasive carcinomas (three cases) regardless of their basic ploidy. The mitotic index tended to be higher in the aneuploid-predominant tumors than in the diploid-predominant tumors. In the current observation, there was no significant correlation between the DNA distribution pattern and histologic type of the "dysplasia" or carcinoma. We found that most of the so-called severe dysplasias of the colon and rectum already gained definitive characteristic of carcinoma in the DNA pattern, i.e., ploidy heterogeneity. Therefore, they can be identified as intramucosal carcinomas, distinct from the normal epithelia and adenomas of the colon and rectum.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call