Histopathology Reporting
Guidelines for Surgical Cancer
This book is an easily comprehensible and practicable framework for standardised histopathology reports in surgical cancer. The pathological features of the common carcinomas are detailed and non-carcinomatous malignancies are also summarised. 8th edition TNM and WHO classifications of cancers are incorporated, with comments on any associated pathology, diagnostic clues and prognostic criteria supplemented visually by line diagrams.
Each chapter's introduction gives epidemiological, clinical, investigative and treatment summary details. Other pathology includes updated immunophenotypic expression and molecular techniques. The impact of these ancillary investigations on diagnosis, and as biomarkers of prognosis and prediction of response to treatment is summarised, as is the effect of adjuvant treatments on cancers. Experience based clues are given throughout as aids to tumour typing, grading, staging, and gauging prognosis and response to treatment.
Histopathology Reporting: Guidelines for Surgical Cancer, Fourth Edition is invaluable for trainee and consultant diagnostic histopathologists all over the world, equipping the reader to produce high quality, clinically appropriate histopathology reports, and to participate in contemporary multidisciplinary team management of patients with surgical cancer.
David Boyle is an NHS consultant in histopathology and a fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists. He graduated from Queen's University Belfast in 2005 and commenced training in pathology in 2007, becoming a fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists in 2011. He has worked as an NHS consultant in histopathology since 2014 and is a general pathologist with a special interest in dermatopathology and breast pathology. He has published a number of original articles and review papers.
Derek C. Allen (Belfast City Hospital, UK) is one of the authors of Histopathology Specimens: Clinical, Pathological and Laboratory Aspects, also published by Springer.
Each chapter's introduction gives epidemiological, clinical, investigative and treatment summary details. Other pathology includes updated immunophenotypic expression and molecular techniques. The impact of these ancillary investigations on diagnosis, and as biomarkers of prognosis and prediction of response to treatment is summarised, as is the effect of adjuvant treatments on cancers. Experience based clues are given throughout as aids to tumour typing, grading, staging, and gauging prognosis and response to treatment.
Histopathology Reporting: Guidelines for Surgical Cancer, Fourth Edition is invaluable for trainee and consultant diagnostic histopathologists all over the world, equipping the reader to produce high quality, clinically appropriate histopathology reports, and to participate in contemporary multidisciplinary team management of patients with surgical cancer.
David Boyle is an NHS consultant in histopathology and a fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists. He graduated from Queen's University Belfast in 2005 and commenced training in pathology in 2007, becoming a fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists in 2011. He has worked as an NHS consultant in histopathology since 2014 and is a general pathologist with a special interest in dermatopathology and breast pathology. He has published a number of original articles and review papers.
Derek C. Allen (Belfast City Hospital, UK) is one of the authors of Histopathology Specimens: Clinical, Pathological and Laboratory Aspects, also published by Springer.
ISBN | 9783030278281 |
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Artikelnummer | 9783030278281 |
Medientyp | E-Book - PDF |
Auflage | 4. Aufl. |
Copyrightjahr | 2020 |
Verlag | Springer-Verlag |
Umfang | 512 Seiten |
Sprache | Englisch |
Kopierschutz | Digitales Wasserzeichen |