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  1. 30 de abr. de 2021 · Atypical small acinar proliferation is a histopathological diagnosis of unspecified importance in prostate needle-biopsy reports, suggestive but not definitive for cancer. The terminology corresponds to some uncertainty in the biopsy report, as the finding might represent an underlying non-cancerous pathology mimicking cancer or an ...

  2. Overview. Atypical small acinar proliferation (ASAP) that is suspicious for malignancy is not a specific pathologic entity; instead, it is a diagnosis that incorporates a continuum ranging...

  3. RESULTADOS. La incidencia de cáncer de próstata global de la serie fue del 42,5% (1.219 pacientes) ( Tabla 1 ). En 117 casos (4%) se diagnosticó atipia acinar y 75 pacientes (64%) fueron sometidos al menos a una segunda biopsia, estos pacientes serán el objeto de este estudio.

  4. 24 de abr. de 2020 · Atypical small acinar proliferation suspicious (ASAP) was devised to represent our inability to render an incontrovertible diagnosis of cancer within a focus of concern that generally has fewer than 2 dozen acini, less than 1 mm (Am J Surg Pathol 1997;21:1489, Urology 1998;51:749)

  5. Incidencia y significación de la “proliferación acinar atípica” en las biopsias transrectales de próstata. Incidence and significance of “atypical acinar proliferation” in transrectal prostatic biopsies. F. Herranz Amo1, F. Verdú Tartajo, J.M. Díez Cordero, D. Subirá Ríos, I. Castaño González, M. Moralejo Gárate, J.I ...

  6. 14 de sept. de 2015 · Atypical small acinar proliferation (ASAP) is a diagnosis that occurs in about 1-2% of prostate biopsies [ 3 ]. The term ASAP, first defined by Bostwick, represents suspicious glands without adequate histologic atypia for a definitive diagnosis of prostate adenocarcinoma [ 4 ].

  7. In urologic pathology, atypical small acinar proliferation, is a collection of small prostatic glands, on prostate biopsy, whose significance is uncertain and cannot be determined to be benign or malignant.