General Histopathology File
Her voice was calm. In histopathology, you are never the first to find cancer, and you will never be the last. But tonight, you are the witness. And a witness must be precise.
“Carcinoma,” she whispered to herself, not as a diagnosis, but as a hypothesis.
She reached for her reference textbook— Rosai and Ackerman’s Surgical Pathology —but she already knew the staging criteria. Cribriforming in a colonic adenocarcinoma implied poor differentiation. It implied lymphovascular invasion. It implied that Mr. Henderson’s "?malignancy" was going to be a long, difficult road involving an oncologist, a surgeon, and a chemotherapy port. general histopathology
The cellular pathology lab of a large tertiary referral hospital, 11:47 PM.
She started at low power, scanning the architecture. The normal colonic mucosa is a landscape of orderly test tubes—straight crypts marching down to the muscularis mucosae like pipes in an organ. Here, the pipes were bent. They branched. They formed irregular back-to-back glands that Alisha’s brain had been trained to recognize as a threat. It was the histopathological equivalent of hearing a twig snap in a dark forest. Her voice was calm
There it was. The smoking gun. The ticket to a staging scan and a poor prognosis.
That’s not just carcinoma, she thought. That’s the bad kind. And a witness must be precise
She paused. Outside, a janitor mopped the corridor. Somewhere in the city, Mr. Henderson was asleep, unaware that a stranger in a white coat had just mapped the entire architecture of his disease. She pressed the record button.
The Architecture of Ruin
Alisha reached for her dictaphone. She would tell the story plainly: "Received in formalin, labeled 'sigmoid colon,' are three fragments of tan-pink tissue measuring up to 0.4 cm. Microscopic examination demonstrates an infiltrative adenocarcinoma..."
She rotated her neck until it cracked, then clicked slide #1882-B into place. The cribriform pattern reappeared, more pronounced this time. A malignant gland had broken open, spilling its cells into a nearby vein—a small, round, blue-stained thrombus containing tumor cells.
