Malignant Bone Tumors - Vith International Symposium of the Gesellschaft zur Bekampfung der Krebskrankheiten Nordrhein-Westfalen e.V., Dusseldorf, October 17/18 1974 (Hardcover)


Bone Tumors - A Challenge for Cooperation E. GRUNDMANN Among the wide variety of human tumors, those of the skeletal system have an exceptional position in several respects. Above all, they are comparatively rare, and that is why reliable diagnostic criteria were compiled only recently, that is during the last three decades. It is only five years since the outlines of an international code of classi- fication were traced. The code was applied and discussed critically and with varying results by several international working groups. Cer- tain drawbacks are due to the broad and manifold spectrum of histolo- gic manifestations in neoplastic bone. Even the best experts in dia- gnostic histology would hardly be able to classify more than 85% of all bone tumors after the proposed code system. For quite a long time the osteoclastic giant cells, observed in almost any kind of bone tumor, have so much fascinated the histologist's eye that he was apt to pro- claim the diagnosis "brown giant cell tumor" for almost any osteoclas- tic tumor regardless of its benignity or malignancy. Nowadays the group of "giant cell tumors" though'restricted, still remains disputed in terms of malignancy and benignity. The problem will certainly not be settled in a definite way without extensive follow-up studies. In this context we may see actual progress in new regional. bone tumor registries being set up after the American example in many countries, among them the German Federal Republic.

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Bone Tumors - A Challenge for Cooperation E. GRUNDMANN Among the wide variety of human tumors, those of the skeletal system have an exceptional position in several respects. Above all, they are comparatively rare, and that is why reliable diagnostic criteria were compiled only recently, that is during the last three decades. It is only five years since the outlines of an international code of classi- fication were traced. The code was applied and discussed critically and with varying results by several international working groups. Cer- tain drawbacks are due to the broad and manifold spectrum of histolo- gic manifestations in neoplastic bone. Even the best experts in dia- gnostic histology would hardly be able to classify more than 85% of all bone tumors after the proposed code system. For quite a long time the osteoclastic giant cells, observed in almost any kind of bone tumor, have so much fascinated the histologist's eye that he was apt to pro- claim the diagnosis "brown giant cell tumor" for almost any osteoclas- tic tumor regardless of its benignity or malignancy. Nowadays the group of "giant cell tumors" though'restricted, still remains disputed in terms of malignancy and benignity. The problem will certainly not be settled in a definite way without extensive follow-up studies. In this context we may see actual progress in new regional. bone tumor registries being set up after the American example in many countries, among them the German Federal Republic.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Springer-Verlag

Country of origin

Germany

Series

Recent Results in Cancer Research, 54

Release date

May 1976

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

1976

Editors

Dimensions

0 x 0mm (L x W)

Format

Hardcover - Cloth over boards

Pages

282

ISBN-13

978-3-540-07519-6

Barcode

9783540075196

Categories

LSN

3-540-07519-4



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