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T4 is tumor invading the mucosa of the bladder or rectum and/or extending beyond the true pelvis (bullous edema is not sufficient evidence to classify a tumor as T4)
T4 tumor with prostatic invasion
T4 tumor with scrotal invasion
Ta is defined as noninvasive localized squamous cell carcinoma
The anal canal extends from the proximal aspect of the external sphincter to the anal verge at the intersphincteric groove
The anatomic subsites of the bone
The Ophthalmic Oncology Task Force (OOTF) Multicenter International Survey collected data required to stage eye(s) with retinoblastoma by five different schemes
The regional lymph nodes of the colon and rectum
The regional lymph nodes of the duodenum
The regional lymph nodes of the ileum and jejunum
The regional lymph nodes of the renal pelvis
The regional lymph nodes of the ureter
The retroperitoneal pancreatic margin (hatched area; also referred to as the mesenteric or uncinated margin) consists of soft tissue that often contains perineural tissue adjacent to the superior mesenteric artery
These nodal metastases are considered M1
Top: A “strandy” pattern with intervening skeletal muscle observable at low-power is often classifiable as WPOI-5
Tumors of the head of the pancreas are those arising to the right of the superior mesenteric-portal vein confluence
Two views of T3: on the left, tumor more than 4 cm in greatest dimension limited to the thyroid (categorized as T3a); on the right, a tumor of any size with gross extrathyroidal extension invading only strap muscles (sternohyoid, sternothyroid, thyrohyoid or omohyoid muscles) (categorized as T3b)
Two views of T3 in the nasal cavity and ethmoid sinus showing tumor invading maxillary sinus and palate (left) and extending to the floor of the orbit (right)
Two views of T4b in the nasal cavity and ethmoid sinus
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