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Showing papers by "Setsuko K. Chambers published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five-year actuarial survival and disease-free survival, respectively, for Stages I-II patients surgically staged by a gynecologic oncologist were 83 +/- 7% and 76 +/- 8%, compared to 59 +/- 11% for the group operated upon by a nononcologist.

124 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Transvaginal ultrasonography may determine which women would benefit from an endometrial biopsy, both for symptomatic and asymptomatic women, and the refined technology of transvaginal Ultrasonography and hysteroscopy in the future may influence more directly the evaluation of women with abnormal uterine bleeding.
Abstract: Today, evaluating women with abnormal uterine bleeding generally is initiated in the office with an endometrial biopsy. The indications and contraindications for endometrial sampling along with situations which do not, per se, demand sampling are listed in Figure 1. In women younger than 40 years of age, it may be appropriate in some clinical situations to initiate hormonal therapy after an endocrine evaluation before endometrial sampling; however, with the newer sampling devices that cause minimal discomfort, a histologic evaluation can be performed easily. Furthermore, the endometrial biopsy may help to distinguish anovulatory from ovulatory bleeding and exclude a hyperplastic condition or carcinoma. If the patient does not respond to medical therapy, then hysteroscopy may identify endometrial polyps or submucosal myomas. Bleeding in postmenopausal women requires endometrial sampling. If a diagnosis of cancer can be made in the office, this will expedite treatment. For those cases in which, for technical reasons, it is impossible to do an office biopsy or in which an examination under anesthesia is necessary for evaluation, then a D&C is indicated. The refined technology of transvaginal ultrasonography and hysteroscopy in the future may influence more directly the evaluation of women with abnormal uterine bleeding. As noted, transvaginal ultrasonography may determine which women would benefit from an endometrial biopsy, both for symptomatic and asymptomatic women. Likewise, the hysteroscope, under certain circumstances, may help identify pathologic findings missed by endometrial biopsy and/or reassure the patient or physician that a negative biopsy is the result of an atrophic mucosa. Because of the increase in the use of hormonal therapy, both in postmenopausal women for replacement and in women with breast cancer as adjuvant therapy, endometrial sampling must be performed for screening. Follow-up for women with premalignant changes of the endometrium treated with hormones also would require sampling to assess response. The overwhelming arguments in favor of the accuracy of an office-based endometrial biopsy, the convenience to the patient and physician, and the cost containment have been established firmly in the literature. Office screening procedures will continue to play important roles in the diagnostic skills of the gynecologist.

88 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A role for the NEU gene product in the physiology of benign ovarian surface epithelium and the neoplastic epithelial cells of preinvasive borderline and some invasively malignant adenocarcinomas is suggested.

70 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Conservative surgery to preserve reproductive function is appropriate for all patients with early stage ovarian germ cell malignancies and selected patients with advanced disease.

61 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Sep 1992-Blood
TL;DR: The results show that posttranscriptional changes during induction play a major role in the differential regulation of alpha 1 and alpha 3 isoforms of Na+,K(+)-ATPase; regulation of the latter may be important for early granulocytic differentiation, or for one of the differentiated functions of mature granulocytes.

12 citations