Neoplasm Invasiveness
| Definition: |
Ability of neoplasms to infiltrate and actively destroy surrounding tissue. |
| Notes: |
IM for GEN only or for invasive process; when IM for GEN only, qualif permitted; NIM with no qualif + neopl terms /pathol (IM); do not use for specific histologically invasive tumors (e.g., invasive fibroma = FIBROMATOSIS, AGGRESSIVE in Tumor Key & not al |
Neoplasm Invasiveness Categories.
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Leukemic Infiltration - A pathologic change in leukemia in which leukemic cells permeate various organs at any stage of the disease. All types of leukemia show various degrees of infiltration, depending upon the type of leukemia. The degree of infiltration may vary from site to site. The liver and spleen are common sites of infiltration, the greatest appearing in myelocytic leukemia, but infiltration is seen also in the granulocytic and lymphocytic types. The kidney is also a common site and of the gastrointestinal system, the stomach and ileum are commonly involved. In lymphocytic leukemia the skin is often infiltrated. The central nervous system too is a common site. |
Neoplasm Invasiveness Definitions and Terms
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