Olisa E G, Kennedy J, Kish M H, Lanava T S, Williams A O
Am J Clin Pathol. 1976 Sep;66(3):537-44. doi: 10.1093/ajcp/66.3.537.
The Rye histologic classification of Hodgkin's disease has been applied to 143 previously untreated cases of Hodgkin's disease in Negro patients seen in four hospitals in Washington, D.C.,during a 16-year period (1959-1974). The frequencies and age distributions of histologic subtypes were compared with those in American and two African series. Those histologic subtypes associated with poor prognoses (mixed-cellularity and lymphocytic depletion) predominated in American Negroes and in Negroes from Ibadan, Nigeria, and Kampala, Uganda. In an American series from Connecticut (approximately 98% Caucasian) the histologic subtypes lymphocytic predominance and nodular sclerosis were preponderant. There were statistically significantly less of the nodular sclerosis subtype (P less than 0.005), and more of the mixed-cellularity subtype in American Negroes compared with the Connecticut series (P less than 0.001). In contrast to findings in predominantly Caucasian populations, there was a predilection of the nodular sclerosis subtype for males in American and in African Negroes. This study showed that Hodgkin's disease in American Negroes epidemiologically corresponds to the so-called "intermediate pattern" of the disease.