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Intraoperative Frozen Cytology of Central Nervous System Neoplasms: An Ancillary Tool for Frozen Diagnosis

Authors :
Seung Yeon Ha
Eung Yeop Kim
Na Rae Kim
Woo Kyung Kim
Dong Hae Chung
Gie-Taek Yie
Seong Son
Sangho Lee
Hee Young Hwang
Sang Gu Lee
Dong Bok Shin
Chan Jong Yoo
Myunghee Kang
Hyun Yee Cho
Jungsuk An
Sun Jin Sym
Eun Young Kim
Jae Yeon Seok
Kyu Chan Lee
Source :
Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine, Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine, Vol 53, Iss 2, Pp 104-111 (2019)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background Pathologic diagnosis of central nervous system (CNS) neoplasms is made by comparing light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and molecular cytogenetic findings with clinicoradiologic observations. Intraoperative frozen cytology smears can improve the diagnostic accuracy for CNS neoplasms. Here, we evaluate the diagnostic value of cytology in frozen diagnoses of CNS neoplasms. Methods Cases were selected from patients undergoing both frozen cytology and frozen sections. Diagnostic accuracy was evaluated. Results Four hundred and fifty-four cases were included in this retrospective single-center review study covering a span of 10 years. Five discrepant cases (1.1%) were found after excluding 53 deferred cases (31 cases of tentative diagnosis, 22 cases of inadequate frozen sampling). A total of 346 cases of complete concordance and 50 cases of partial concordance were classified as not discordant cases in the present study. Diagnostic accuracy of intraoperative frozen diagnosis was 87.2%, and the accuracy was 98.8% after excluding deferred cases. Discrepancies between frozen and permanent diagnoses (n = 5, 1.1%) were found in cases of nonrepresentative sampling (n = 2) and misinterpretation (n = 3). High concordance was observed more frequently in meningeal tumors (97/98, 99%), metastatic brain tumors (51/52, 98.1%), pituitary adenomas (86/89, 96.6%), schwannomas (45/47, 95.8%), high-grade astrocytic tumors (47/58, 81%), low grade astrocytic tumors (10/13, 76.9%), non-neoplastic lesions (23/36, 63.9%), in decreasing frequency. Conclusions Using intraoperative cytology and frozen sections of CNS tumors is a highly accurate diagnostic ancillary method, providing subtyping of CNS neoplasms, especially in frequently encountered entities.

Details

ISSN :
23837837
Volume :
53
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pathology and translational medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8d4b8cc339334e6ca849245efa355f1a