Publications by authors named "Saxen E"

The association between serum alpha-tocopherol levels and the subsequent incidence of cancer was investigated in a longitudinal study of 21,172 men initially aged 15-99 years in six geographic areas in Finland. The baseline examination was conducted in 1968-1972, and during the follow-up of 6-10 years, 453 cancers were diagnosed. The serum alpha-tocopherol levels were measured from stored serum samples from these men and from 841 male controls, matched for municipality and age, who did not develop cancer during the follow-up.

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Four cases of sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy (SHML) from Finland were studied clinically and immunohistologically. Three patients had histologically verified extranodal manifestations that often caused the most prominent clinical symptoms. Upper respiratory tract obstruction resulting from SHML lesions was present in two cases, multiple bone lesions in one case, and skin lesions in one case.

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The observed occurrence of cancer in Finland in 1980 was compared with that predicted by extrapolation of the trends in cancer incidence by site in 1957 to 1968. The predictions had been constructed as 90% confidence intervals. Of the mutually exclusive 33 incidence predictions, 22 (67%) included the observed incidence rate.

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The material of the Finnish Cancer Registry from 1953-79 (279,745 cancer patients, 774,518 person-yr at risk) was analyzed for the occurrence of multiple cancer. There were 5,871 new primary cancers in the series (excluding the first 12 mo from diagnosis of the first cancer). A positive association between cancers with similar etiology could be demonstrated, e.

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To study possible causes of the high lung cancer incidence among Finnish males, the Finnish Cancer Registry and the Cancer Registry of Norway in 1962 performed a population survey covering smoking habits, occupational and residential history and, in Finland, sauna habits. The cohort of 4,475 Finnish men has now been followed up for incidence of lung cancer in 1964-1979. The relative importance of 3 factors--sauna baths, occupational exposure to dust, and migration to urban areas--was studied in different smoking categories.

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Undifferentiated (anaplastic) thyroid carcinoma is a highly aggressive neoplasm which may simulate microscopically a variety of soft tissue sarcomas. The three major subtypes are spindle cell, giant cell, and squamoid. Electron microscopic examination and immunocytochemical stain for cytokeratin are the most useful special techniques to document the epithelial nature of the tumor.

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Two cases of breast tumors with a uniform solid carcinoid pattern and argyrophilic dense-core granules were analyzed by immunohistochemistry in order to compare their characteristics with known features of other carcinoid tumors and ordinary breast carcinomas. The tumors were positive for keratin-type intermediate filaments, neuron-specific enolase and alpha-chain of human chorion gonadotropin but negative for vimentin and S-100 protein. Laminin was found only in a rim between tumor cell islands and stroma but not among the cells.

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The cancer registry in cancer control.

Arch Geschwulstforsch

December 1984

The sole justification for a cancer registry is that use is made of its data. The information stored and produced by a cancer registry forms the scientific basis for planning and organization of the treatment and prevention of cancer in the community. Its data can also be used in the testing of various hypotheses concerning the aetiology and biology of malignant neoplasms and it may also give rise to various new hypotheses.

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Fifty-one cases of Hodgkin's disease, of lymphocytic predominance type, nodular subtype (HDLPN) were singled out from three sources: lymph nodes originally diagnosed as malignant lymphoma, nodes suspected of lymphoma and nodes suspected of toxoplasmosis. Two thirds of the 51 patients were men, and the median age was 42 years. The disease was characteristically unilocular and cervical and axillary nodes were most often involved.

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Ecologic and individual risk indicators were derived from the population censuses of Finland Cancer Registry. The years covered in the study were 1955-1974 for the ecologic analysis and 1971-1975 for the analysis on individuals. The incidence of both diseases was high in an urban environment with high standard of living.

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We have (1) estimated the incidence of desmoid tumor (DT) in the Finnish population, and (2) defined statistically four major age components of the DT with different biological properties. The incidence of the DT, based on admissions to four separate hospitals and on the number of pathological biopsy specimens analyzed at the Central Pathological Laboratory of Helsinki University, is 2.4-4.

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Pathology is both a clinical and pre-clinical subject, a bridge between the clinical disciplines and the basic sciences. The teaching of organ pathology should be given to a major extent during the first clinical year, and only part of it should be integrated with the clinical courses, e.g.

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In order to determine the incidence of different morphological types of thyroid cancer in the Nordic countries, all cases of thyroid cancer reported to the national cancer registries of Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden over periods ranging from 1 to 14 years were re-examined (a total of 706 cases) by one or two pathologists from each country. The age-adjusted incidence rate for Iceland was clearly higher than those for the other Nordic countries. The rate for Finland was the lowest, and a five-fold difference was seen between Iceland and Finland.

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The clinical features, histology and follow-up of lymph node toxoplasmosis are presented in the light of 237 histologically and serologically verified cases. Lymph node toxoplasmosis is a disease with mild symptoms, and in most patients the enlarged lymph nodes were the only sign. Three fourths of the patients were women and the majority were under 40 years of age.

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The occurrence of colon cancer in four Scandinavian (Nordic) countries--Finland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden--is described. In addition, a number of correlations relevant to the etiology of colon cancer are presented. The observable differences in the risk for colon cancer among the Nordic countries can largely be accounted for by socioeconomic factors.

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