Metastatic carcinoma in histologic sections of aspirated bone marrow: a comparative autopsy study.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-1976
Abstract
The incidence of metastatic carcinoma in bone marrow was studied by two different approaches in 220 consecutive autopsies of patients with carcinoma: histologic sections of aspirates from the iliac spine, as usually done in living patients; and gross and microscopic examination of the thoracolumbar spine. Ten percent of the autopsies showed bone marrow metastases by the aspiration technic as contrasted with 34.5% by the autopsy technic. Three cases had positive bone marrow aspirates in the absence of metastases demonstrable by routine autopsy. The combination of autopsy and aspiration technics yielded an incidence of metastatic marrow involvement of 35.9%. Of patients with marrow metastases at autopsy, 25% also had positive aspirates. This study establishes a norm for the comparison of the efficiency of discovery of metastatic carcinoma by different modalities of clinical bone marrow sampling.
Volume
69
Issue
4
First Page
438
Last Page
439
ISSN
0038-4348
Published In/Presented At
Suprun, H., & Rywlin, A. M. (1976). Metastatic carcinoma in histologic sections of aspirated bone marrow: a comparative autopsy study. Southern medical journal, 69(4), 438–439. https://doi.org/10.1097/00007611-197604000-00018
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
1265504
Department(s)
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Document Type
Article