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1.
OBJECTIVE: To analyse fine needle aspirates from solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) of the pleura and to elucidate the cytological features unique to these tumours and differential diagnostic findings of benign and malignant SFTs. METHODS: Fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology slides from eight cases of SFT of the pleura, including six benign and two malignant SFTs, were reviewed. The subsequent histological slides were also examined. RESULTS: Cytological diagnoses from six histologically proven cases of benign SFTs were low-grade sarcoma (one), non-small cell carcinoma (one), malignant tumour (1) and benign (three). Two cases of malignant SFTs were cytologically diagnosed as malignancy. The aspirates showed a varying degree of cellularity. Most smears were composed of single, scattered fusiform cells, and irregular loose aggregates of oval to spindle cells intimately admixed with dense collagenous stroma. Two malignant SFTs had a greater number of cells in clusters, and displayed mitotic activity, without significant cytological atypia. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnosis of SFT may be suggested by a combination of cytological and radiological findings. The precise determination of malignancy for SFT, however, is not usually straightforward on the basis of cytological features alone. The findings of highly cellular clusters and mitotic activity in the FNA cytological smear can help differentiate malignant from benign SFTs.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVES: Exact categorization of soft tissue tumours (STTs) on smears requires application of various ancillary techniques. This study was aimed at evaluating the role of fluorescent immunocytochemistry (FICC) in cyto-diagnosis of 30 STT cases. METHODS: Thirty cases of soft tissue tumours were included in the present study. All cases were subjected to routine Giemsa and Papanicolaou stain. Extra smears were made and kept for fluorescent immunostaining. A panel of cytoskeletal antibodies, tagged with FITC (Fluorescein isothyocynate), was employed in all these cases. Fluorescent immunostained smears were examined under Zeiss Confocal Laser scanning microscope, using double immunofluorescence (red-green). Finally, all cases were subjected to biopsy and again immunoperoxidase staining. RESULTS: Among the 30 cases in the present study, unaided cytological diagnoses ranged from 'spindle cell' tumour in four (13.3%) cases, benign and malignant spindle cell tumour in 17 (56.6%) cases, to malignant mesenchymal tumour in nine (30%) cases. FICC helped in further correct categorization of 25/30 (83.3%) cases viz. leiomyoma (three), benign neurogenic tumour (six), schwannoma (one), dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (three), synovial sarcoma (two), rhabdomyosarcoma (two), malignant fibrous histiocytoma (five) and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour (three). Aggressive fibromatosis was found to be a missed diagnosis in two cases. Overall concordance between cyto-diagnosis with FICC, and histopathology results was 83.3% (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Fluorescent immunocytochemistry is a significant ancillary technique for making a rapid and specific diagnosis of STT, as required for their timely management. Incorporation of a wide panel of antibody markers with clinico-cytological correlation is recommended in forming an exact diagnosis in these cases.  相似文献   

3.
This report describes the FNAC findings in three cases of granular cell tumour of the breast. The patients comprised two females aged 59 and 62 years and one male aged 28 years. All patients presented with a breast lump which was clinically and radiologically suspicious of malignancy. FNAs yielded moderately cellular specimens which on cytologic examipation consisted of groups of cells and single cells with small regular nuclei and abundant granular cytoplasm. Bare nuclei were also present but these did not have the characteristic bipolar appearance of myoepithelial cells. In two cases there was a granularity to the background. The aspirates were reported as equivocal or atypical, probably benign, and surgical biopsy was performed. Histological examination showed typical benign granular cell tumours with strong positive staining for S-100 protein. Pathologists should be aware that granular cell tumour may occur in or around the breast and should consider this diagnosis in aspirates containing a population of cells with regular nuclei and abundant granular cytoplasm. The main cytologic differential diagnoses are likely to be apocrine cells and histiocytes. The suspicion of a granular cell tumour should be heightened when these features are present in an aspirate from a clinically and radiologically suspicious mass. These cases highlight the role of the triple approach encompassing clinical, radiological and cytological features in the assessment of a breast lesion.  相似文献   

4.
N. Gupta, A. Barwad, K. Katamuthu, A. Rajwanshi, B. D. Radotra, R. Nijhawan and P. Dey Solitary fibrous tumour: a diagnostic challenge for the cytopathologist Background: Solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) is an uncommon spindle cell tumour that can occur in a variety of locations. Cytological features of this tumour have only rarely been reported in the literature. We describe the cytomorphological features of SFT with an emphasis on diagnostic pitfalls. Methods: We retrieved nine cases of histopathologically proven SFT. Three cases had sampling error with inadequate smears and, therefore, six cases with adequate cellularity were analysed for cytological findings. The cytomorphological features and the differential diagnoses on fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) are discussed. Results: No definitive cyto‐diagnosis of any of these cases was possible because of the morphological overlap with various soft tissue tumours and other tumour types. There was one false‐positive case, in which the possibility of sarcoma was suggested due to the presence of scattered atypical cells. Cytologically, the smears from the SFTs showed spindle to plump cells embedded in metachromatically staining dense ropy collagen material. The cells usually had oval to spindle shaped nuclei, bland chromatin and wavy elongated pale staining cytoplasm. Conclusion: A diagnosis of SFT on cytology smears is challenging. Careful attention given to certain cytological features in an appropriate clinicoradiological setting and application of immunochemistry, including CD34 and CD99 immunostaining on cytological samples, can help in the diagnosis of SFT in some cases. It is important to consider cytological overlaps of this tumour in order to avoid false‐negative or false‐positive results.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the sensitivity of the vaginal smear cytologic examination in detecting vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN) and to evaluate the cytologic findings of cases of VAIN. STUDY DESIGN: Cases with a histologic diagnosis of VAIN were identified from the Barnes-Jewish Hospital South and North Campus over a period of five and nine years, respectively. Only posthysterectomy patients with a tissue biopsy diagnosis of VAIN and with a vaginal smear obtained within three months of the biopsy were included in the study. Pertinent clinical information was obtained by reviewing the medical records. Two pathologists reviewed the pathologic samples. RESULTS: Thirty-five vaginal smears from 31 posthysterectomy patients were included in the study. The mean age was 57 years (range, 29-84). The cytologic diagnoses of smears from patients with VAIN included: high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (19 cases), low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (10 cases), atypical squamous cells of uncertain significance (5 cases) and negative for malignancy (1 case). CONCLUSION: The sensitivity of the vaginal smear cytologic examination in detecting VAIN is 83%. Obscuring inflammation contributed to false negative diagnoses in two cases.  相似文献   

6.
?. Pohar‐Marin?ek and J. Lamovec Angiosarcoma in FNA smears: diagnostic accuracy, morphology, immunocytochemistry and differential diagnoses Objective: The aim of our study was to analyse the diagnostic accuracy in recognizing angiosarcoma from fine needle aspiration (FNA) samples and to determine morphological features of angiosarcoma in cytology. Methods: FNA samples from 18 histologically confirmed angiosarcomas obtained between 1985 and 2009 were included in the study. Original cytological diagnoses were retrieved, smears reviewed and morphological features analysed: cellularity, smear pattern, cell morphology, contents of background. Outcome of immunocytochemistry was noted and additional reactions performed if material was available. Results: There were 13 primary angiosarcomas and five recurrent tumours; nine tumours were epithelioid. Twelve tumours were cytologically diagnosed as malignant, three as suspicious and three were judged unsatisfactory. Only two primary tumours were diagnosed as vascular. According to morphology, tumours were divided into those with predominantly epithelioid cells and those with predominantly spindle cells. Within these two groups were variations due to grade of tumour. Cytomorphology did not correlate well with histology in mixed and spindle cell types of angiosarcomas. Immunocytochemistry was applied in seven cases, specific vascular marker CD31 only twice at the time of diagnosis and three times retrospectively. Conclusions: Angiosarcomas are difficult to recognize on FNA smears when they lack the typical dual, spindle and epithelioid cell population and when they occur in internal organs where carcinomas are more common. Very few reliable data are available concerning specificity of CD31 on cytological material.  相似文献   

7.
The clinical, cytopathologic and histopathologic features of a case of gynecomastia induced by chemotherapeutic drugs are described. Fine needle aspiration (FNA) smears showed epithelial atypia, and an erroneous cytologic diagnosis of carcinoma was made. Histopathologic study showed gynecomastia with epitheliosis, papillomatosis and atypical ductal hyperplasia. Review of the FNA smears showed the findings to be more typical of a reparative or regenerative process; these findings had been cytologically overinterpreted, partly due to the lack of adequate clinical information submitted with the aspirate. The possible causes of gynecomastia, the induction of epithelial atypia by cytotoxic chemotherapy and the cytologic features whose recognition may prevent false-positive diagnoses in such cases are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The differential diagnosis of fibroadenomas vs phyllodes tumours by fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology is not possible in the majority of cases. The present study aims to look at common and dissimilar features to allow differentiation, if possible. We reviewed the FNA findings of 18 histologically proven phyllodes tumours and 18 fibroadenomas, checking in each case the epithelial features, the stromal features, and any atypia. Using a semi-quantitative score assessed by two observers we were able in most cases to distinguish a phyllodes tumour from a fibroadenoma. The most important criteria were larger stromal fragments, numerous plump stromal bare nuclei, and the higher ratio of stromal bare nuclei to epithelial bare nuclei in phyllodes tumours. In the present study, an original diagnosis of phyllodes tumour was made in 7/18 (38.9%) cases but with our criteria this could be improved to 15/18 (83.3%) cases. Therefore, the presence of specific stromal features in a dimorphic cellular pattern should suggest the correct diagnosis and differentiate its appearance from a cellular fibroadenoma.  相似文献   

9.
Polychrome-stained equine synovial fluid specimens from 34 normal joints and 129 joints with clinical abnormalities were examined cytologically. The smears from joints with abnormalities were categorized as within normal limits (4.7%), slight abnormality (27.9%), proliferative synovitis (21.7%), neutrophilic pattern (20.2%), elongated cell pattern (10.1%), other moderate to marked abnormality (11.6%) and unsatisfactory (3.9%). Cytologic abnormalities that were not restricted to a single category included spindle cells, crystals, stellate cells and cartilage fragments. Multinucleate cells and mononucleate cells with dense cytoplasm and a delicate periphery were seen in smears from cases with clinical diagnoses of osteochondrosis or fracture; interpretation of these cells as osteoclasts and their mononucleate precursors was supported by positive staining with tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase. Smears within the same cytologic category were not found to correspond with a single clinical diagnosis. The identification of several cytologic patterns in cases with the same clinical diagnosis suggests that multiple stages of disease were sampled. Except in cases with the cytologic neutrophilic pattern, there was not a consistent relationship between the histologic features in synovial biopsy specimens and the cytologic findings; the morphologic variation within synovial membrane sections and between sections from different locations was sometimes marked. When compared with air-dried, Wright-Giemsa-stained smears, the polychrome-stained smears were more sensitive in the detection of cytologic abnormalities and were less often falsely negative or unsatisfactory. Following surgery, cases with clinical diagnoses of osteochondrosis (29 cases) and fracture (25 cases) were analyzed according to clinical outcome and cytologic category. While 80% of the horses with proliferative synovitis in cytologic specimens were sound, only 67% of those with the elongated cell pattern, 50% of those with slight abnormality and 33% of those with other moderate to marked abnormality were sound. A statistically significant relationship (P less than .02) was found in cases with a diagnosis of osteochondrosis: animals with a proliferative synovitis pattern were almost three times as likely to be sound as compared to those with slight abnormality. These findings indicate that polychrome-stained equine synovial fluid smears (1) provide information that is different from that found in corresponding histologic sections and (2) are superior to air-dried, Wright-Giemsa-stained smears for cytologic examination. The polychrome-stained equine synovial fluid smears were found to provide information supportive of clinical, radiographic and prognostic data.  相似文献   

10.
A. Nayak, V.K. Iyer and S. Agarwala
The cytomorphologic spectrum of Wilms tumour on fine needle aspiration: a single institutional experience of 110 cases Objective: To analyse the cytomorphologic spectrum of Wilms tumour (WT) on aspirates, the largest series reported to date. Study design: Adequate aspirates from paediatric renal tumours over a period of 17 years were reviewed and selected if subsequent excision showed WT or aspirates were diagnostic for WT and clinical/radiological evidence consistent with that diagnosis. Smears were re‐examined for the proportion of components, degree of pleomorphism and mitosis. Results: Of 110 aspirates, smears were triphasic in 44 (40.0%), biphasic (blastema and tubules) in 36 (32.7%) and monophasic (blastema alone) in 30 (27.3%). Stromal predominance was seen in 11 aspirates (10.0%) and five showed rhabdomyoblastic differentiation; all 11 were triphasic. Mean mitotic rate was 9.3/5000 cells (range 4–39/5000). Nuclear atypia not amounting to anaplasia and without atypical mitoses was seen in 15 (13.6%); these presented diagnostic problems. Two aspirates (1.8%) were considered anaplastic (unfavourable), both having atypical mitoses. Criteria similar to histology (i.e. 3‐fold or more variation in nuclear size, marked hyperchromasia with bizarre nuclei and atypical mitoses in a biphasic or triphasic aspirate) helped in distinguishing anaplastic WT. Histopathological correlation in 67 cases showed good correlation of blastemal predominance, stromal predominance and anaplastic histology with the corresponding cytology. However, 9/27 (33.3%) triphasic tumours had only blastemal cells on corresponding aspiration because of sampling error. Cytokeratin was positive in 4 of 20 aspirates with blastema alone. Conclusions: Aspirates from WT were triphasic or biphasic in the majority (72.7%), permitting cytological diagnosis, which was improved by cytokeratin immunocytochemistry. Blastemal and stromal predominance on histology correlated well with cytology, but many triphasic tumours showed only blastema on aspiration. Anaplastic WT can be detected on aspirates using criteria similar to histology.  相似文献   

11.
E. Sigamani, V. K. Iyer and S. Agarwala Fine needle aspiration cytology of infantile haemangioendothelioma of the liver: a report of two cases Background: Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) of infantile haemangioendothelioma of the liver (IHL) has not previously been described because routine use of FNAC is contraindicated due to the risk of bleeding. Methods and materials: Two patients presented with progressively increasing right upper quadrant abdominal mass. The index case was a girl aged two and a half years with a large single mass in the right lobe of the liver. The second was a 3‐month‐old girl in whom ultrasonography revealed multiple hypoechoic lesions in the liver. Ultrasound‐guided fine needle aspiration had been performed on both patients. May‐Grünwald‐Giemsa stained smears from these two patients were reviewed and correlated with histopathology. Results: Both aspirates showed predominantly normal hepatocytes and bile ductules amongst which tumour cells were admixed. The latter were oval to spindle‐shaped with scant cytoplasm and wavy, kinked and indented nuclear outlines. The non‐epithelial character of the tumour cells was apparent and helped to rule out hepatoblastoma. One case showed extramedullary haemopoiesis. The diagnosis of IHL was established on subsequent excision in the first case and a wedge biopsy in the second case. CD34 and factor VIII R antigen were positive in the tumour cells. Conclusion: Radiological diagnosis of IHL is possible in a majority of cases, but sometimes features may overlap with hepatoblastoma and fine needle aspiration may be performed inadvertently. Characteristic kinked nuclei and intermixed normal liver tissue might suggest IHL in the differential diagnosis of a spindle cell vasoformative tumour.  相似文献   

12.
T. Kawasaki, S. Nakamura, G. Sakamoto, T. Kondo, H. Tsunoda‐Shimizu, Y. Ishii, T. Nakazawa, K. Mochizuki, T. Yamane, M. Inoue, S. Inoue and R. Katoh
Neuroendocrine ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast: cytological features in 32 cases Objective: The purpose of this study was to clarify the cytological features of neuroendocrine ductal carcinoma in situ (NE‐DCIS) of the breast. Methods: We analysed the cytopathological findings in 22 fine needle aspiration (FNA) smears and 17 nipple discharge smears obtained from 32 Japanese patients with NE‐DCIS. Results: The background of the FNA smears was clear (59%), mucoid (23%), haemorrhagic (14%) or necrotic (5%). Most of the FNA smears (95%) showed high cellularity. Characteristically, NE‐DCIS cells were loosely arranged in three‐dimensional solid clusters or singly dispersed. Well‐developed vascular cores with or without malignant cells were occasionally recognized. The tumour cells were polygonal or spindle‐shaped with a fine granular, abundant cytoplasm. Nuclei with finely granular chromatin were round or oval and often eccentrically located (plasmacytoid appearance). Mitotic figures were infrequent. Nuclear grade was estimated to be low in 86%. Most nipple discharge smears had fairly low cellularity with poorly preserved cell clusters in a markedly haemorrhagic background, although two (12%) were extremely cellular with cytological characteristics similar to those of the FNA smears. Pre‐operative cytological malignant diagnoses were made in 42% of FNA smears and 0% of nipple discharge smears. Immunohistochemistry for neuroendocrine markers (chromogranin A and synaptophysin) confirmed the neuroendocrine nature of this tumour in adequate cytological specimens. Conclusions: NE‐DCIS has distinctive cytological features and can therefore be diagnosed as a neuroendocrine tumour in most FNAs and some nipple discharge smears by cytological examination employing immunohistochemical techniques. We emphasize that a breast lesion with these features may be in situ and not invasive, and also that there is a risk of under‐diagnosis.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVE: To study the immunocytochemical expression of the tight junction protein Claudin-7 in smears from breast carcinomas and correlate with grading, nodal status, locoregional and distant metastases and the cellular cohesion. METHODS: The material consisted of 52 air-dried smears from fine needle aspirates of breast carcinomas, both primary and metastatic and smears from seven benign lesions. A primary antibody to Claudin-7 was used for immunocytochemical staining. The degree of staining was recorded as negative, reduced or full, with full expression meaning equivalent to the staining pattern found in the fibroadenomas used as benign control. Staining intensity and the percentage of stained cells were evaluated. The control smears revealed a strong membrane and cytoplasmic positivity in all luminal epithelial cells. Cellular cohesion was graded as: (1) mainly cohesive groups, (2) groups and single cells and (3) mainly single cells. RESULTS: All primary and recurrent/metastatic breast lesions expressed Claudin-7. Full expression was demonstrated in 46% of the cases. Reduced expression was found in 54%. In cases with reduced expression, the percentage of stained cells were usually high, and no smear showed <50% stained tumour cells. The staining pattern was heterogeneous and always mixed membrane/cytoplasmic. Claudin-7 expression showed a significant correlation (P < 0.05) with grading, locoregional and distant metastases, nodal involvement and cellular cohesion in invasive carcinomas, but not with tumour size or subtype. CONCLUSION: Reduced expression of Claudin-7 correlated with higher tumour grade, metastatic disease, including loco-regional recurrences and with cellular discohesion.  相似文献   

14.
D. L. Ribu, P. W. Shield and J. F. Bligh
The varied presentation of metastatic melanoma in fine needle aspiration cytology of the breast Objective: To identify cytomorphological patterns of metastatic melanoma (MM) in breast fine needle aspiration (FNA) specimens and highlight the differential diagnoses and features most useful in identifying MM. Methods: The clinical, radiological and FNA findings of 16 cases were reviewed. Cytological features evaluated related to cell arrangement, size and shape of cells, nuclear and cytoplasmic features, and the presence or absence of necrosis. Results: The series consisted of 14 females and two males, ranging in age from 24 to 83 years (mean = 50 years). A previous history of melanoma was available in 12/16 (75%) cases at the time of FNA reporting; however the clinical/radiological impression in 4/16 cases was of a breast cyst. The cases were classified into six morphological variants: classical (8/16), pseudopapillary (3/16), spindle‐cell (1/16), melanin‐rich (1/16), pleomorphic (2/16) and lymphoma‐like (1/16). The varying patterns raised a wide range of differential diagnoses; however, discohesion, binucleation and granular cytoplasm were the major features seen in 94% of all cases. In 14/16 cases (88%), plasmacytoid cells, prominent nucleoli and cytoplasmic vacuolation were identified. Melanin and multinucleation were detected in 44% of cases and intranuclear cytoplasmic invaginations in 63%. Necrosis was present in more than half of the cases (56%). Conclusion: MM should be considered in the differential diagnosis of breast FNA specimens when atypical cells are seen that present as plasmacytoid cells in a dispersed or pseudopapillary pattern, or as spindle, pleomorphic or pigmented cells. These features, combined with clinical history and immunocytochemistry, may assist in correctly identifying MM and directing optimal treatment.  相似文献   

15.
There are four basic reasons for the difficulties in diagnosing small round cell tumours (SRCT) in childhood from fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) samples. First, SRCTs are rare and it is difficult for cytopathologists to obtain enough experience for rendering reliable diagnoses. Second, SRCTs are morphologically very similar. Third, many SRCTs do not have specific antigens which could be demonstrated with immunocytochemistry (ICC) or they lose them when poorly differentiated. In addition, cross reactivity exists between some SRCTs. Unstandardized performance of ICC also contributes to the difficulties due to unreliable results. Fourth, suboptimal FNAC samples add additional pitfalls. The latter may be due to partly degenerate samples or to unrepresentative ones in cases where a SRCT is a heterologous component of another nosological entity. Lymphoma, neuroblastoma, nephroblastoma, Ewing's tumour/primitive neuroendocrine tumours and rhabdomyosarcoma are discussed in detail, while other less common SRCTs are mentioned as differential diagnoses when appropriate. The use of cytogenetic and molecular techniques for differentiating between certain SRCTs is helpful in some doubtful cases. However, there are still problems in the use of these techniques, especially their cost which may delay their being introduced in every cytopathology laboratory.  相似文献   

16.
M. Rosa and K. Toronczyk Fine needle aspiration biopsy of three cases of squamous cell carcinoma presenting as a thyroid mass: cytological findings and differential diagnosis Objective: Primary squamous cell carcinomas of the thyroid gland are extremely rare, comprising about 1% of thyroid malignancies. Although squamous cell carcinomas are readily identified as such on aspiration cytology in the majority of cases, the differentiation of primary versus metastatic tumour might not always be easy. Herein, we report three cases of squamous cell carcinomas involving the thyroid gland. Methods: Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) was performed in three patients with a thyroid mass using standard guidelines. Smears were stained with Diff‐Quik and Papanicolaou stains. Results: Two patients were male and one was female, aged 59, 45 and 35 years, respectively. In all three patients a thyroid mass was present. FNAC smears in all cases showed cytological features of squamous cell carcinoma including keratinization and necrosis. After clinical and cytological correlation, one case appeared to be primary, one case metastatic, and in the third case no additional clinical information or biopsy follow‐up was available for further characterization. Conclusions: Because primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid is a rare finding, metastatic squamous cell carcinoma should always be excluded first. Metastatic disease usually presents in the setting of widespread malignancy, therefore a dedicated clinical and radiological investigation is necessary in these cases. In both clinical scenarios the patient’s prognosis is poor.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the diagnostic accuracy and reliability of exfoliative laryngeal cytology. STUDY DESIGN: Over three years (1996-1999) cytologic smears were obtained from clinically suspicious laryngeal lesions during laryngoscopy in a total of 31 selected patients (28 males and 3 females with an age range from 28-90 years). The cytologic diagnoses were analyzed and correlated with the histologic and final clinical diagnoses in 17 and 14 cases, respectively. Cytologic identification of the exact histologic type of the lesion was evaluated in 17 patients from whom both cytologic smears and biopsy material were obtained. RESULTS: The overall specificity was 100%, with no false positive diagnoses. The overall sensitivity was 93.3%, with one false negative cytologic diagnosis, in a case of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Cytohistologic correlation showed complete agreement between cytologic and histologic diagnoses in five of six benign lesions, in four cases of dysplasia and in six cases of squamous cell carcinoma. The overall diagnostic accuracy of cytology was 96.7% CONCLUSION: Exfoliative cytology by the smear technique is a reliable and accurate method in clinically suspected laryngeal lesions. Moreover, exfoliative cytology may be applied as the only alternative diagnostic method, especially in elderly patients with coexistent cardiorespiratory problems, when biopsy is not advisable or indicated.  相似文献   

18.
The range of pathologies that lymph node (LN) fine needle cytology (FNC) may encounter is extremely wide and ancillary techniques, in addition to traditional smears, are generally required to reach reliable cytologic diagnoses. Storing part of the cytologic material may be useful or necessary for molecular testing. The main difficulties concern the generally small size of the sample and the different methods of acquisition of LN‐FNC. Therefore, the preanalytic phase is extremely important for LN‐FNC. This article outlines the management of LN‐FNC material, vials, technical devices (e.g.: additional smears, cytospin slides, LBC slides, cards, resins, etc.) and main ancillary techniques to assess their optimal application, taking into account the different diagnostic needs and cell storage.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: Hyaline-vascular Castleman's disease (CD) is difficult to diagnose on fine needle aspiration and may be mistaken to be a lymphoreticular malignancy because of the presence of large cells having nuclei showing atypical features. The cytomorphological findings in three histopathologically documented cases of hyaline-vascular CD were evaluated to a set of cytomorphological criteria which could help in the identification of this condition on aspirate smears. METHODS: The Papanicolaou and Diff-Quik stained smears from three cases of histologically documented hyaline-vascular CD were reviewed by one author. After review the following cytomorphological criteria were suggested to be indicators of the lesion. (i) The presence of large oval to round cells having ill-defined cytoplasmic margins and large nuclei with irregular nuclear outlines having fine or coarse chromatin giving a crumpled tissue paper appearance. (ii) A polymorphous population of lymphoid cells predominantly of small lymphocytes in the background. The smears from these three cases were then mixed with smears from four cases of reactive lymphoid hyperplasia and three cases of Hodgkin's lymphoma. These ten cases were blindly evaluated by two other cytopathologists in order to evaluate the utility of the proposed criteria in identifying CD. RESULTS: The cytomorphological criteria seen in the methodology section were present in all the cases. These features were helpful in distinguishing CD from reactive lymphoid hyperplasias and Hodgkin's Lymphomas in all cases except one case. CONCLUSION: Although hyaline-vascular CD is a difficult diagnostic entity on aspirate material the presence of large histiocytic cells with a crumpled tissue paper appearance of the nuclei in a background of small lymphocytes are useful indicators for suspecting this lesion. However, these findings should be analysed in larger studies to determine if they could in anyway reduce the diagnostic dilemma in cases of CD.  相似文献   

20.
Fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy of orbital masses: a critical review of 51 cases
FNA biopsy of 51 orbital masses is critically reviewed. Aspiration was performed with a 23 G needle inserted by an ophthalmologist; the smears were prepared by a cytologist. Forty-two cases (83%) were correctly diagnosed as benign or malignant either with (68%) or without (15%) correct specification of the histology. There were two false-negative and seven inadequate cases. Immunocytochemical stains were performed in five cases using the following antibodies: L26 (Pan B), UCHL1 (Pan T), and immunoglobulin light chains (three cases) in order to distinguish inflammatory pseudotumours from low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. In two cases we used CAM 5.2 (a monoclonal cytokeratin cocktail) and vimentin to ascertain the epithelial origin of two metastatic tumours. In five other cases cytospins were not adequately cellular for immunocytochemistry. Insufficient material and one false-negative sample were obtained from very fibrotic lesions or from posteriorly located lesions. The results are discussed and compared with other series reported in the literature. Orbital FNA biopsy may be considered a useful tool in the diagnostic approach to orbital masses in which the relatively high number of inadequate aspirations is offset by a low cost-benefit ratio.  相似文献   

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