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Ideas in pathology. Ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast: a proposal for a new simplified histological classification association between cellular proliferation and c-erbB-2 protein expression.
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1994
Year
Necrosis in DCIS in the absence of pure classical comedo morphology is a feature of more biologically aggressive in situ breast cancer with an intermediate proliferative fraction as compared with the high proliferative fraction of pure comedo DCIS and the low proliferative fraction of DCIS without necrosis. There was no significant difference in DNA ploidy (diploid or aneuploid) between the subgroups as assessed by chi 2 analysis. Further larger studies are required to establish if DCIS with necrosis (non-pure comedo) also shows a greater tendency to local recurrence after breast conservation treatment than do subtypes of DCIS without necrosis. DCIS with necrosis (non-pure comedo) should be adopted as a distinct histological subgroup of DCIS in future clinical studies of in situ mammary carcinoma.