Abstract
ALTHOUGH sarcomas of the uterus are rare in comparison with the carcinomas of that organ, certain features of their histogenesis, pathology and clinical course make them an interesting group. Two recent cases, a sarcoma botroides and a late metastasizing leiomyosarcoma, prompted a review of the 18 cases of sarcoma of the uterus seen at the Rhode Island Hospital in the past eighteen years. Special attention has been paid to the pathology of these cases with a view to determining their probable origins and the relation of cytologic characteristics to prognosis. Observations have also been made on the clinical characteristics of . . .

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