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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 86, 528-536, Copyright © 1983 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
LF DeCaro, R Paladugu, JR Benfield, L Lovisatti, H Pak and RL Teplitz
The behavior of pulmonary APUD tumors is not constant; management is
controversial, and morphology has reached its limit as a tool for
prognostic assessment and therapeutic planning. We have studied 24 patients
with carcinoids; 17 patients with typical carcinoids presented with Stage I
disease, but one patient later died most probably of small cell
undifferentiated lung cancer (SCLC). Seven patients with atypical
carcinoids included three with Stage III cancers, one patient with
simultaneous bilateral carcinoids, and one patient with simultaneous
adenocarcinoma. Of 17 patients with typical carcinoids, 16 or 92% are
disease free or died of unrelated causes. Of seven patients with atypical
carcinoids, five or 71% are disease free. Tumor doubling time of atypical
carcinoids, was 79.6 months (45 to 120) or six times shorter than that of
typical carcinoids (p less than 0.05). Two of the three deaths from cancer
were probably from SCLC and one from a synchronous adenocarcinoma. Review
of diagnostic material from 12 patients with SCLC who survived a mean of 41
months (24 to 134) showed that diagnosis had rested on cytology alone in
four patients and that, in seven patients, the quality or extent of the
original diagnostic material was adequate to make the diagnosis of a
malignant tumor but inadequate to permit reclassification. Tumor cells from
11 patients with carcinoids (seven typical and four atypical) and 28
patients with SCLC had DNA measurement by image analysis. The mean DNA
content of typical and atypical carcinoids and SCLC is 1.17, 1.25, and 1.94
respectively (p less than 0.001). These findings strongly suggest a
relationship between DNA content and atypia or malignancy in APUD lung
tumors. We conclude that there are at least two levels of virulence among
carcinoids represented by typical and atypical carcinoids. The prognosis
for treated Stage I typical and atypical carcinoids is excellent. When
deaths occur, they are from systemic cancer. Current evidence indicates
that DNA measurements by image analysis may help to discriminate levels of
malignancy among APUD pulmonary cancers and thereby help to clarify
therapeutic controversies.
ARTICLES
Typical and atypical carcinoids within the pulmonary APUD tumor spectrum
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