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Endometrial carcinoma: The effect of estrogens
Gynecologic Oncology, 1979Abstract At the Medical University of South Carolina 373 women with adenocarcinoma of the endometrium diagnosed from August 1967 through February 1977 were studied according to their history of exogenous estrogen intake. Of the patients referred to as "estrogen users," 35% were or had been on some form of estrogen with only 4% of all population using ...
Albert Kreutner+4 more
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Gestagens and endometrial carcinoma
Gynecologic Oncology, 1976Abstract The current state of knowledge of the clinical and cellular effects of progestational agents in endometrial carcinoma is reviewed. High dose gestagens have an overall response rate of 32%, with most response in well-differentiated tumors. Nevertheless, 15% of poorly differentiated tumors do respond.
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Estrogens and endometrial carcinoma
Human Pathology, 1977The causative role of estrogen in the development of endometrial cancer has been documented by many studies. Gusberg and Kardon reported a 21% frequency of carcinoma associated with ovarian estrogenic tumors (24% for postmenopausal women and 12.5% for premenopausal women).
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ULTRASTRUCTURE OF ENDOMETRIAL CARCINOMA
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1972SCOPUS: ar.j ; info:eu-repo/semantics ...
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Pathology of Endometrial Carcinoma
2016On a clinicopathological and molecular level, two distinctive types of endometrial carcinoma, type I and type II, can be distinguished. Endometrioid carcinoma, the typical type I carcinoma, seems to develop through an estrogen-driven "adenoma carcinoma" pathway from atypical endometrial hyperplasia/endometrioid intraepithelial neoplasia (AEH/EIN).
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1988
Before examining the question of minimal carcinoma of the endometrium, we need to have accurate concepts of what a carcinoma is. Carcinomas are not to be understood in terms of what cells look like. Carcinomas have to be understood as disturbed societal relationships among populations of cells.
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Before examining the question of minimal carcinoma of the endometrium, we need to have accurate concepts of what a carcinoma is. Carcinomas are not to be understood in terms of what cells look like. Carcinomas have to be understood as disturbed societal relationships among populations of cells.
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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1951
J.H. Randall, E.E. Wieben, D.F. Mirick
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J.H. Randall, E.E. Wieben, D.F. Mirick
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