» start page

 » tutorial / help

 » documentation
    
publications
    
about / tech info

 » personal annotations
    
load /save

 » quiz mode

 » authors / contact

 » Contents listing
    
short long WHO

  Normal breast
  Non-neoplastic lesions
  Benign epithelial
   proliferations
  Fibro/myoepithelial
   tumors

  Tumors of the nipple

  Lobular neoplasia

  Intraductal prolifera-
   tive lesions

  Invasive epithelial
   tumors

    
IDC ILC Other

  Mesenchymal tumors

  Hematopoetic and
   metastatic tumors

  IH-stainings, TMAs,
   FISH and CISH

Invasive ductal carcinoma - classical

up one level

Histologic classification of IDC is based on grading, which is of high clinical relevance for predicting the prognosis of the patient and when assessing the need for post-surgical adjuvant therapies.

Several grading schemes have been presented, of which the Bloom-Richardson and the Elston-Ellis modification are the most commonly used.

Grading is based on assessing:
1. The degree of tubule and glandular structure formation (present in <10%, 10-75%, or >75% of the tumor; giving scores 3,2 or 1),
2. Nuclear pleomorphism (small regular uniform cells =1; moderate increase in size and variability =2 ; and marked variation =3)
3. Mitotic count (per 10 high power fields). The cutoffs for 1, 2, and 3 grade points depend on the area of the microscope field.

Histologic grade = 1 if the sum of the scores is 5 or less, grade = 2 if the sum is 6-7 and grade = 3 if the sum is 8 or 9.

 Grade 1

   

 Grade 2

   

 Grade 3


All material on this website is protected by copyright. By accessing or downloading contents
from this website, you expressly agree and consent to our terms and conditions.