The prostate puncture pathology report looks primarily at Gleason grading to determine the degree of differentiation of the gland.
Gleason grading is currently the most widely used grading system for histologic evaluation of prostate cancer, and is most commonly used for grading groupings based on the 2014 International Society of Urologic Pathology Upper Consensus Diagnostic Opinion.Gleason grading is based on the degree of differentiation of the prostate cancer without regard to cytologic changes.
According to the degree of differentiation of the gland, it is divided into 5 grades (1 to 5 grades) from good to poor, with 1 being the best differentiated and 5 being the worst.Gleason grading is characterized by a grading system with 1 grading principle (growth mode), 2 aspects (major and minor growth modes), a 5-grade system (the degree of differentiation of the gland is graded from 1 to 5), and a 10-point scale (the worst differentiation is 5+5=10). The details are as follows:
1. Group 1: Gleason score is 3+3=6, indicating relatively well-differentiated prostate cancer.
2. Group II: Gleason score is 3+4=7, most of them are adenocarcinomas with better differentiated prostate cancer, and a small number of them are poorly differentiated.
3. Group 3: Gleason score is 4+3=7, most of the adenocarcinomas of prostate cancer are slightly poorly differentiated, and a small number of adenocarcinomas are well differentiated.
To summarize, if you have prostate problems, you should seek medical treatment in time.