How to see if the pathology report is benign or malignant

The pathology report determines whether the tumor is benign or malignant, mainly based on the description of the diagnosis. If there are hints of cancer, sarcoma, etc. in the pathology report, it means that the tumor is malignant; if the diagnostic pathology report describes hints of inflammation, hyperplasia, etc., the tumor is mostly benign. A complete pathology report will have the professional pathology diagnosis of the pathologist at the bottom, in which, if there are cancer, sarcoma, lymphoma, glioma and other descriptions in the pathology diagnosis, the lesion is malignant and needs timely surgical treatment in order to avoid spreading of the cancerous lesion, and if the pathology diagnosis is that there is no heterogeneous or ulcerative changes, the lesion is benign. After getting the pathology report, the patient should give it to the attending doctor in time, and the doctor should make the judgment of benign or malignant according to the specific condition of the patient, and should not make the conclusion rashly by himself, so as to avoid delaying the treatment and causing unnecessary misunderstanding.