Correlation of intraoperative cytological and final histological diagnoses
Date
2014
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
Objective: Intraoperative cytology is a cost-effective, rapid, and
easy technique, and studies have shown good correlation
between intraoperative cytology and histology. We undertook
this study to compare the intraoperative cytology diagnoses of
brain lesions made in our unit over a 10-year period with the
definitive histological diagnoses. The aim was to determine the
degree of accuracy of this procedure.
Study design: This is a retrospective study of intraoperative neuropathology
consultation cytology smears or imprints and histology
of 69 cases obtained over a 10-year period. Cytology
smears were stained using both Papanicolaou and Giemsa. Histology
sections were prepared from routine formalin-fixed paraffin-
embedded tissue and stained using H and E method. Each of
the smears and histology samples were assessed by at least two
pathologists. Cytological diagnosis was correlated with final histological
diagnosis. The sensitivity and specificity of cytological
diagnosis was evaluated using final histological diagnosis as
gold standard.
Results: Correlation was strongest with inflammatory lesions followed
by low-grade neoplasms. High-grade neoplasms also
showed good concordance, but the degree of correlation was
lower than in the other categories. Misdiagnosis was commonest
with benign tumors.
Conclusion: Intraoperative cytology is a relatively simple, reliable,
and accurate diagnostic technique and should be more
commonly used, particularly in low-resource settings. Diagn.
Cytopathol.
Description
Keywords
cytology, intraoperative, correlation, histology
