The determination of the behaviour of a tumour is vital for planning treatment and formulating a prognosis. Often, expert macroscopic inspection is an excellent guide to the type and progression of a tumour, but such provisional assessment must always be a prelude to formal pathological examination of a tissue sample.
Allowing for such variables as the degree of malignancy changing in time in one tumour, and some tumours showing little tendency for metastasis despite cellular abnormality, there are some general rules that can aid the clinician:
Tumour:
Benign Tumour:
Malignant tumour
Generally, benign neoplasia has the suffix "-oma" whereas malignancy is denoted by a reference sarcoma or carcinoma. There are anomalies, e.g. traditional references such as Wilms' tumour, seminoma and mesothelioma - all are malignant. Teratomas are also classified according to their degree of differentiation into mature and immature.
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.