Abstract

DNA distribution patterns and the fractions of the cell cycle phases were determined by means of flow-through cytometry in 87 samples of normal, atrophic, hyperplastic and carcinomatous human endometrium. The S-phase fractions vary during the normal menstrual cycle between 1 and 3% and reach a periovulatory maximum between 4.4 and 4.7%. Atrophic endometrium and regressive glandular cystic hyperplasia have little DNA synthesis (1.01% and 1.68% S-phase fractions respectively). Proliferating glandular cystic hyperplasia reveals 3.38% S-phase fraction, whereas adenomatous hyperplasia has an increased number of DNA-synthesizing cells (4.81%). The well-differentiated endometrial carcinoma shows no cytophotometrically detectable differences in comparison to adenomatous hyperplasia. All endometrial samples except for poorly differentiated endometrial carcinoma showed a diploid to tetraploid DNA distribution pattern. The poorly differentiated endometrial carcinoma displays two different types: one rapidly growing diploid-tetraploid tumor with 8.0 to 9.6% S-phase fractions, and another type with stemline deviations, polyploid nuclei and less pronounced synthetic activity.

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