Takigawa W, Yoshida H, Kitamura S
… +8 more, Tokutake C, Kondo M, Fujima M, Shibuki Y, Kobayashi-Kato M, Tanase Y, Uno M, Ishikawa M
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39380246
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BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to elucidate the frequency and cytologic features of positive peritoneal washing cytology (PWC) in cervical gastric-type adenocarcinoma (GAS) and to clarify the clinical signif...BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to elucidate the frequency and cytologic features of positive peritoneal washing cytology (PWC) in cervical gastric-type adenocarcinoma (GAS) and to clarify the clinical significance of positive PWC. METHODS: The authors analyzed cases from their institution between 1991 and 2023 in which patients underwent surgery and PWC. The study included 62 patients who had cervical GAS (1991-2023; including seven patients with adenocarcinoma in situ and 26, 15, nine, and five patients with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics 2018 stage I, II, III, and IV disease, respectively) and 100 patients who had usual-type endocervical adenocarcinoma (2007-2023; including 65, 15, and 20 patients with stage I, II, and III disease, respectively). The frequency of positive PWC results and cytologic features was assessed, and correlations between positive PWC results and clinicopathologic factors were examined, including prognosis, in the GAS group. RESULTS: Positive PWC results were significantly more frequent in patients who had GAS at 24% (15 of 62 patients) compared with 7% (seven of 100 patients) in those who had usual-type endocervical adenocarcinoma. The cytologic features of GAS included distinct cellular atypia (enlarged nuclei, nuclear irregularity) and frequent formation of spherical clusters (10 of 15 cases) without the golden-yellowish mucus commonly seen in cervical smears. A positive PWC result in GAS was significantly correlated with larger tumor size, parametrium invasion, lymph node metastasis, and elevated carbohydrate antigen 19-9 levels. In patients with stage I GAS, the PWC-positive group had significantly shorter disease-free survival and overall survival compared with the PWC-negative group. CONCLUSIONS: Positive PWC findings are frequent in cervical GAS and are associated with pathologic factors indicative of tumor growth and progression. In patients who have stage I GAS, positive PWC results may indicate a poor prognosis, warranting further investigation.
Li JJX, Cheng HY, Lee CHC
… +3 more, Ng JKM, Tsang JY, Tse GM
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39377168
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BACKGROUND: Metastatic breast cancers are frequently encountered in cytology and require immunocytochemistry (ICC). In this study, traditional and multiplex ICC (mICC) for GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3), gross cystic dis...BACKGROUND: Metastatic breast cancers are frequently encountered in cytology and require immunocytochemistry (ICC). In this study, traditional and multiplex ICC (mICC) for GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3), gross cystic disease fluid protein 15 (GCDFP15), and mammaglobin (MMG) were performed with the aim of validating mICC in cell blocks, with further single-cell expression pattern analysis to identify the single markers and combinations of markers most sensitive in subtypes of breast cancer. METHODS: GATA3, GCDFP15, and MMG were paired with OptiView 3,3'-diaminobenzidine and Ventana DISCOVERY Purple and Blue, respectively, with cyclical and serial staining. Bright-field imaging was performed with the Mantra 2 system and analyzed with the inForm Tissue Finder (Akoya Biosciences). Cell detection and phenotyping were further confirmed by two pathologists. RESULTS: In the 36 cases studied, traditional ICC and mICC demonstrated good concordance (kappa coefficient, >0.5; p < .01) at three cutoffs (1%, 5%, and 50%), except for GATA3 at the 1% cutoff. Single-marker positivity outnumbered double-marker positivity and the exceedingly rare triple-marker positivity (<3%). GATA3 was the leading single marker-positive phenotype in all breast cancer subtypes, except for MMG in estrogen receptor-positive, progesterone receptor-positive, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive (ER+/PR+/HER2+) breast cancers. Limited to two markers, GATA3/MMG included the greatest number of tumor cells for luminal breast cancers (ER+/PR+/HER2+, 60.6%; ER+/PR+/HER2+, 31.4%), whereas HER2-overexpressed breast cancers (27.4%) and triple-negative breast cancers (26.4%) favored the combination of GATA3/GCDFP15. CONCLUSIONS: For a single marker, GATA3 displayed the highest sensitivity. The addition of MMG for hormone receptor-positive breast cancers and GCDFP15 for hormone receptor-negative breast cancers further increased sensitivity. The low proportion of multimarker-positive cells suggested that the coexpression observed with traditional ICC is attributable to intratumoral heterogeneity, not genuine coexpression.
Chen CC, Lu SC, Chang YK
… +4 more, Bai CH, Hsiao KY, Lee KY, Wang YH
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39297378
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BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. Screening high-risk populations for lung cancer with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduces lung cancer mortality. Bronchoscopy is...BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. Screening high-risk populations for lung cancer with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduces lung cancer mortality. Bronchoscopy is a diagnostic procedure used to monitor patients suspected of having lung cancer after LDCT. Rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) can improve the diagnostic accuracy of endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA), although its diagnostic value remains unclear. In this meta-analysis, the authors evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of ROSE during bronchoscopy. METHODS: The PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases were searched for studies evaluating the diagnostic accuracy of ROSE for lung cancer during bronchoscopy. Studies evaluating the performance of ROSE and articles providing sufficient data for constructing a 2 × 2 table on a per-lesion basis were included. A meta-analysis was conducted using a bivariate random-effects model. RESULTS: In total, 32 studies involving 8243 lung lesions were included with a pooled sensitivity of 91.8% and a pooled specificity of 94.9%. Subgroup analysis of 12 studies involving 2929 specimens from patients who underwent computed tomography revealed a pooled sensitivity of 93.8% and a pooled specificity of 96%. Further subgroup analysis of seven studies on the diagnostic outcomes of ROSE for intrathoracic or mediastinal lymph nodes through EBUS-TBNA for lung cancer staging revealed a pooled sensitivity of 90.1% and a pooled specificity of 96.9%. CONCLUSIONS: ROSE exhibited high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing lung cancer during bronchoscopy. It also exhibited high sensitivity in detecting lung cancer in patients undergoing LDCT and higher specificity for nodal staging with EBUS-TBNA.
Hsiao WY, Saba NF, Lubin D
… +2 more, Chen A, Shi Q
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39297376
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BACKGROUND: ThyroSeq offers the opportunity to stratify the risk of malignancy (ROM) in the characterization of indeterminate thyroid nodules, especially those categorized as atypia of undetermined significance (AUS). Ho...BACKGROUND: ThyroSeq offers the opportunity to stratify the risk of malignancy (ROM) in the characterization of indeterminate thyroid nodules, especially those categorized as atypia of undetermined significance (AUS). However, whether ThyroSeq interpretations correlate with cytologic features, management, and surgical outcome remains unclear. METHODS: Thyroid fine-needle aspiration specimens categorized as AUS and follicular neoplasm (FN) from 2017 to 2021 were identified from a cytology database search. Patient clinical information and ThyroSeq results were collected and correlated with resection diagnosis if available. RESULTS: A total of 520 cases were classified as AUS and 111 cases were classified as FN. Within the AUS lesions, 190 cases (36.5%) were subcategorized as cytologic atypia (III-C), 109 cases (21.0%) as architectural atypia (III-A), 138 cases (26.5%) as both cytologic and architectural atypia (III-CA), and 69 cases (13.0%) as oncocytic cell aspirate (III-O). Category III-C showed the highest malignancy rate (16.7%; p = .29), and a higher ThyroSeq-defined probability of cancer or noninvasive follicular thyroid neoplasms with papillary-like nuclear features. Notably, within III-C, intermediate-risk mutations led to a significantly higher malignancy rate (46.7%; p = .0012). Conversely, III-A had the lowest malignancy rate (9.7%) but this was significantly increased by concurrent high-risk mutations (62.5%). BRAF-like mutations were frequently associated with III-C and classical papillary thyroid carcinoma in histology. RAS-like mutations were the most common alterations across all subcategories, and were frequently associated with follicular-patterned lesions. CONCLUSIONS: Atypia subcategories have differential ThyroSeq-defined ROMs and histologic outcomes. Combining atypia subcategory interpretation, ThyroSeq-defined ROMs and molecular results aids in optimal clinical management for indeterminate thyroid lesions.
Donthi D, Gan Q, Ding QQ
… +1 more, Krishnamurthy S
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39264831
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BACKGROUND: Trichorhinophalangeal syndrome 1 (TRPS1) expression in primary breast and other solid tumors has been investigated but its role as a marker in metastatic tumors is unclear. The objective of this study was to...BACKGROUND: Trichorhinophalangeal syndrome 1 (TRPS1) expression in primary breast and other solid tumors has been investigated but its role as a marker in metastatic tumors is unclear. The objective of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of TRPS1 as a breast cancer immunomarker in metastatic tumors that originated from breast, Müllerian, lung, gastrointestinal (GI), and pancreatic primary tumors with cell blocks from fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and effusion specimens. METHODS: Cell blocks were immunostained with anti-TRPS1 monoclonal antibody (clone EPR16171). Histochemical scores (H scores) (proportion × intensity; range, 0-300) were assigned; H scores of ≥10 were considered positive. Overall, 160 specimens were examined, including 127 FNAs (35 breast, 25 Müllerian, 36 lung, and 31 GI and pancreatic carcinomas) and 33 effusion specimens (18 breast, 12 Müllerian, one lung, and two GI carcinomas). RESULTS: TRPS1 was positive in 51 of 53 (96%) metastatic breast carcinomas and in 28 of 107 (26.2%) nonbreast metastatic tumors. Metastatic breast carcinoma showed the highest mean H score of 247.35, compared to 45.36 in Müllerian, 8.4 in lung, and 5.88 in GI tumors. The sensitivity and specificity of TRPS1 for identifying a breast origin in metastatic tumors was 96.22% and 72.89%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Despite high overall sensitivity, TRPS1 showed lower specificity as a breast immunomarker because of its expression in nonbreast tumors. The mean H score in nonbreast tumors was significantly lower than in metastatic breast tumors. It is important to recognize the broad range of expression of TRPS1 in metastatic breast and nonbreast tumors to avoid an incorrect determination of a metastatic tumor's organ of origin.
Wu SJ, Renshaw AA, Sadow PM
… +4 more, Mahadevan NR, Hirsch MS, Manoharan M, Cibas ES
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39258829
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BACKGROUND: Papillary renal neoplasm with reverse polarity is a recently recognized low-grade neoplasm with a favorable prognosis. To date, its cytologic features have not been well documented. METHODS: Two patients with...BACKGROUND: Papillary renal neoplasm with reverse polarity is a recently recognized low-grade neoplasm with a favorable prognosis. To date, its cytologic features have not been well documented. METHODS: Two patients with papillary renal neoplasm with reverse polarity sampled by fine needle aspiration and core needle biopsy are described, one of whom is under active surveillance without clinical progression and the other is alive and well 16 years after partial nephrectomy. RESULTS: The cytologic features included a mix of papillae and dispersed cells with abundant oncocytic cytoplasm and round, bland nuclei apically displaced away from the papillary core. Immunohistochemistry showed positive staining for GATA3 in both cases. Molecular studies on one of the cases showed a KRAS p.G12V mutation. CONCLUSIONS: The cytologic features of this distinctive, indolent neoplasm are important to recognize because patients with papillary renal neoplasm with reverse polarity may be excellent candidates for partial nephrectomy or even active surveillance.
Starr D, Tjendra Y, Velez Torres JM
… +9 more, Gomez-Fernandez C, Khader SN, Karslioglu-French E, Yip L, Carty SE, Skaugen JM, Nikiforov YE, Seethala RR, Ohori NP
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2025 Jan · PMID 39258823
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INTRODUCTION: Thyroid cytopathology cases with suspicious for malignancy (SFM) diagnosis often result in resection. However, molecular testing offers details that may provide additional insights. In this study, the molec...INTRODUCTION: Thyroid cytopathology cases with suspicious for malignancy (SFM) diagnosis often result in resection. However, molecular testing offers details that may provide additional insights. In this study, the molecular profiles of SFM cases from two institutions that routinely used ThyroSeq v3 (TSV3) were examined. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Following institutional review board approval, SFM thyroid cytopathology cases with TSV3 results were retrieved from the databases of two institutions. Molecular information including molecular-derived risk of malignancy (MDROM), cytologic-histologic correlation data, and other related parameters were calculated. Statistical comparisons were made with a p <.05 considered significant. RESULTS: The core data set comprised 114 SFM cases that passed TSV3 quality assurance. All TSV3 results were reported as positive or negative for genomic alterations and all except five cases provided a probability of malignancy estimate. The overall combined baseline MDROM of 75.7% (95% CI, 70.0-81.4) was comparable to the risk of malignancy (74%) published in the Bethesda System. There was a statistically significant difference between the combined MDROMs of resected and unresected cohorts (79.0% vs 58.6%; p = .0153). Interestingly, the MDROMs of the resected cohorts from the two institutions were statistically different (75.0% vs 85.3%; p = .020). Cytologic-histologic correlation revealed malignant outcome in 88.5% of resected cases. CONCLUSIONS: Molecular analyses of SFM cases demonstrated higher risk genomic alterations that were associated with histologically overt neoplasms, resulting in increased malignancy outcome compared to baseline. MDROM analysis revealed differences in the cytopathologic practice patterns regarding follicular-patterned neoplasms at the two institutions.
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39212584
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BACKGROUND: Recently, a new World Health Organization Reporting System for Soft Tissue Cytopathology (WHO System) was introduced. To analyze the value of this system, routine fine-needle aspiration soft tissue tumor (STT...BACKGROUND: Recently, a new World Health Organization Reporting System for Soft Tissue Cytopathology (WHO System) was introduced. To analyze the value of this system, routine fine-needle aspiration soft tissue tumor (STT) cases were reviewed. METHODS: Cytology samples of STTs collected between 1954 and 2022 at the Institut Curie were used (2214 cases, including 1376 primary tumors). All specimens were classified according to the predominant cytomorphological pattern and the WHO System. The diagnostic accuracy and risk of malignancy (ROM) in each category were calculated. RESULTS: Final diagnoses revealed 1236 malignancies and 978 benign or low-risk tumors. The original cytological evaluation led to 21 false-negative results (0.85%) and 29 false-positive results (1.17%). Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were 98.3%, 92.1%, 97.5%, and 94.2%, respectively. Overall diagnostic accuracy was 94.2%. The ROM calculated according to the WHO System was 29.87%, 2.49%, 39.62%, 51.43%, 68.42%, and 97.69% in the nondiagnostic, benign, atypical, soft tissue neoplasm of uncertain malignant potential, suspicious for malignancy, and malignant categories, respectively; however, it varied broadly depending on the morphological pattern (62.78% in spindle cell tumors, 84.58% in myxoid tumors, 3.00% in lipomatous tumors, 78.15% in epithelioid tumors, 94.26% in pleomorphic tumors, and 100% in round cell tumors). CONCLUSIONS: Cytology of STTs is a powerful diagnostic method. Some cytological patterns overlap in different morphological groups, and the possibility of false-negative and false-positive diagnoses may persist. This analysis evidenced utility of the WHO System, especially when combined with morphological pattern assessment. Subclassification in particular diagnostic categories allowed for calculation of the ROM, which is crucial for optimal patient management.
Marya NB, Powers PD, Bois MC
… +17 more, Hartley C, Kerr SE, Thangaiah JJ, Norton D, Abu Dayyeh BK, Cantley R, Chandrasekhara V, Gores G, Gleeson FC, Law RJ, Maleki Z, Martin JA, Pantanowitz L, Petersen B, Storm AC, Levy MJ, Graham RP
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39207803
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BACKGROUND: The authors previously developed an artificial intelligence (AI) to assist cytologists in the evaluation of digital whole-slide images (WSIs) generated from bile duct brushing specimens. The aim of this trial...BACKGROUND: The authors previously developed an artificial intelligence (AI) to assist cytologists in the evaluation of digital whole-slide images (WSIs) generated from bile duct brushing specimens. The aim of this trial was to assess the efficiency and accuracy of cytologists using a novel application with this AI tool. METHODS: Consecutive bile duct brushing WSIs from indeterminate strictures were obtained. A multidisciplinary panel reviewed all relevant information and provided a central interpretation for each WSI as being "positive," "negative," or "indeterminate." The WSIs were then uploaded to the AI application. The AI scored each WSI as positive or negative for malignancy (i.e., computer-aided diagnosis [CADx]). For each WSI, the AI prioritized cytologic tiles by the likelihood that malignant material was present in the tile. Via the AI, blinded cytologists reviewed all WSIs and provided interpretations (i.e., computer-aided detection [CADe]). The diagnostic accuracies of the WSI evaluation via CADx, CADe, and the original clinical cytologic interpretation (official cytologic interpretation [OCI]) were compared. RESULTS: Of the 84 WSIs, 15 were positive, 42 were negative, and 27 were indeterminate after central review. The WSIs generated on average 141,950 tiles each. Cytologists using the AI evaluated 10.5 tiles per WSI before making an interpretation. Additionally, cytologists required an average of 84.1 s of total WSI evaluation. WSI interpretation accuracies for CADx (0.754; 95% CI, 0.622-0.859), CADe (0.807; 95% CI, 0.750-0.856), and OCI (0.807; 95% CI, 0.671-0.900) were similar. CONCLUSIONS: This trial demonstrates that an AI application allows cytologists to perform a triaged review of WSIs while maintaining accuracy.
Pineda CM, Majid A, Costa DB
… +1 more, VanderLaan PA
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39207725
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BACKGROUND: Lung cancer complicated by malignant pleural effusions (MPEs) is associated with significantly increased morbidity and mortality, yet the mechanisms of MPE development remain poorly understood. This study sou...BACKGROUND: Lung cancer complicated by malignant pleural effusions (MPEs) is associated with significantly increased morbidity and mortality, yet the mechanisms of MPE development remain poorly understood. This study sought to elucidate whether there were specific genomic alterations and/or immunologic biomarkers associated with the presence of MPEs. METHODS: Analysis of comprehensive genomic and immunologic profiling for 275 locally advanced (stage III) or advanced (stage IV) lung adenocarcinomas was subcategorized into cytology-confirmed MPE-positive (MPE+; n = 139 stage IV) and MPE-negative (MPE-; n = 30 stage III + n = 106 stage IV) groups. RESULTS: Smoking frequency (p = .0001) and tumor mutational burden (p < .001) were demonstrated to be lower in the MPE+ group compared to the MPE- group. Median overall survival in the MPE+ group was shorter than in the MPE- group across all data (2.0 vs. 5.5 years; p < .0001) and for smokers (1.2 vs. 6.4 years; p < .0001). There were a number of differences at the genomic level across all cases and when stratifying by smoking status, including a higher frequency of EGFR mutations and a lower frequency of STK11 mutations in the MPE+ cohort. Finally, investigation of the comutational profiles of tumors by MPE status revealed differences in TP53- and STK11-mutant tumors between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, these findings imply that there are both clinical and genetic factors associated with advanced lung adenocarcinoma MPEs. Future studies of these alterations may prove important both for understanding the pathophysiology of MPE development in advanced cancer and for the earlier detection of at-risk patients.
Zeng X, Starr D, Li J
… +12 more, Bi X, Wang C, Bai X, Yin Y, Wu X, Wei J, Du H, Dai W, Li C, Wu X, Wu R, Zhao C
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Nov · PMID 39158418
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BACKGROUND: AICyte has previously demonstrated a potential role in cervical cytology screening for reducing the workload by using a 50% negative cutoff value. The aim of the current study is to evaluate this hypothesis....BACKGROUND: AICyte has previously demonstrated a potential role in cervical cytology screening for reducing the workload by using a 50% negative cutoff value. The aim of the current study is to evaluate this hypothesis. METHODS: The authors used the Ruiqian WSI-2400 (with the registered trademark AICyte) to evaluate a collection of 163,848 original cervical cytology cases from 2018 to 2023 that were collected from four different hospital systems in China. A breakdown of cases included 46,060 from Shenzhen, 67,472 from Zhengzhou, 25,667 from Shijiazhuang, and 24,649 from Jinan. These collected cases were evaluated using the AICyte system, and the data collected were statistically compared with the original interpretative results. RESULTS: In 98.80% of all artificial intelligence cases that were designated as not needing further review, the corresponding original diagnosis was also determined to be negative. For any cases that were designated atypical squamous cells, cannot exclude high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion or higher, the sensitivity and negative predictive value were 90.77% and 98.80%, respectively. The sensitivity and negative predictive value were greater in cases designated as low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion or higher at 98.92% and 99.94%, respectively. Of the 49 low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion or higher that were designed by AICyte as not needing further review, the cytohistologic correlation revealed eight cases of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 1 and 18 negative cases; and the remaining cases were without histologic follow-up. In practice, AICyte used at a 50% negative cutoff value could reduce the anticipated workload if a protocol were implemented to label cases that qualified within the negative cutoff value as not needing further review, thereby finalizing the case as negative for intraepithelial lesions and malignancy. CONCLUSIONS: For pathologic practices that do not have cytotechnologists or in which the workflow is sought to be optimized, the artificial intelligence system AICyte alone to be an independent screening tool by using a 50% negative cutoff value, which is a potential assistive method for cervical cancer screening.
Granados R, Duarte JA, Luján DR
… +6 more, Gutierrez-Pecharromán AM, Solís I, Molpeceres L, Bajo P, Palencia E, Martín N
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39158405
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BACKGROUND: There is a need for additional longitudinal studies with the Aptima messenger RNA human papillomavirus test (AHPV) to support the safety of extended screening intervals. RNA-based extended interventional nucl...BACKGROUND: There is a need for additional longitudinal studies with the Aptima messenger RNA human papillomavirus test (AHPV) to support the safety of extended screening intervals. RNA-based extended interventional nucleic acid (REINA) provides relevant information on the clinical performance of AHPV. METHODS: This is a longitudinal prospective analysis of 1538 participants after AHPV and liquid-based cytology (LBC) co-test complemented with REINA interventional protocol with a second co-test 4 years after negative screening on 2000 women. Diagnostic accuracy and cumulative risks for CIN2+ up to 9 years were calculated for all test combinations. RESULTS: Sensitivity and specificity for CIN2+ were 96.9% and 88.0% for AHPV and 72.3% and 92.0% for LBC. Negative predictive value (NPV) and positive predictive value (PPV) of AHPV were 99.9% and 23.6%. The 5- and 9-year risks of AHPV-negative women were 0.4% and 1.0% (CIN2+) and 0.3% and 0.7% (CIN3+), a 73% and 64% lower risk than with negative LBC (p ≤ .002). REINA participants with an AHPV-positive result at second co-test after a negative AHPV in first round had a significantly lower 5-year risk of CIN2+ (11.1%) than AHPV-positive women with unknown HPV history (29.5%). CONCLUSIONS: Currently, this constitutes the longest European longitudinal study with AHPV testing in screening population. It reveals 99.9% NPV and a significant protective effect of a previous negative test 5 years after a new HPV infection. These findings support the safety of Aptima for screening intervals beyond 5 years. The risk of disease is lower 9 years after a negative AHPV test than 3 years after a negative LBC. High specificity and PPV of Aptima may benefit controlling overtreatment and colposcopy referrals.
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Nov · PMID 39097802
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BACKGROUND: Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy is increasingly used for the diagnosis of hepatocellular masses. Because distinguishing well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) from other well differentiated he...BACKGROUND: Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy is increasingly used for the diagnosis of hepatocellular masses. Because distinguishing well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) from other well differentiated hepatocellular lesions (e.g., large regenerative nodules or focal nodular hyperplasia) requires an assessment of architectural features, this may be challenging on FNA when intact tissue fragments are not sampled. Poorly differentiated HCC and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) may exhibit overlapping pathologic features. Molecular testing can be helpful, because mutations in TERT promoter and CTNNB1 (β-catenin) are characteristic of HCC, whereas mutations in BAP1, IDH1/IDH2, and PBRM1 may favor ICC. The goal of this study was to assess the role of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in further subclassifying indeterminate liver lesions sampled by FNA. METHODS: A retrospective review of liver cytology cases with NGS on cell block material was performed. Age, radiologic features, background hepatic disease and treatment, outcome, and NGS data were obtained from the electronic medical record. RESULTS: Twelve FNA biopsies that had cell blocks from clinically suspected primary hepatic masses were identified. The presence of a TERT promoter mutation supported a diagnosis of HCC for one well differentiated neoplasm. For three patients, the presence of mutations, such as IDH1, CDKN2A/CDKN2B, and BRAF, supported a diagnosis of ICC. Of the eight poorly differentiated carcinomas, NGS helped refine the diagnosis in six of eight cases, with one HCC, three ICCs, and two that had combined HCC-ICC, with two cases remaining unclassified. CONCLUSIONS: Molecular diagnostics can be helpful to distinguish HCC and ICC on FNA specimens, although a subset of primary hepatic tumors may remain unclassifiable.
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Dec · PMID 39097796
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BACKGROUND: The Sydney system for fine-needle aspiration biopsy of lymph nodes has five categories, stressing the role of correlation of cytopathology with clinical, ultrasound, and ancillary findings to achieve diagnosi...BACKGROUND: The Sydney system for fine-needle aspiration biopsy of lymph nodes has five categories, stressing the role of correlation of cytopathology with clinical, ultrasound, and ancillary findings to achieve diagnosis. The five categories constitute a hierarchical system with increasing risk of malignancy from benign to atypical, suspicious, and malignant categories, which informs recommendations for further workup to achieve a final diagnosis as possible. This article analyzes 10 publications using the Sydney system and a meta-analysis of nine of these studies. The primary goal of the analysis is to ascertain the causes of the large ranges in risk of malignancy for the "atypical" and "inadequate" compared to "benign," "suspicious," and "malignant" categories, which were comparable to well-established reporting systems. Research protocols are proposed to improve future studies. METHODS: PubMed literature search from January 2021 to December 2023 identified studies evaluating performance of the Sydney system. RESULTS: Ten studies showed heterogeneity with clinical setting, study design, ultrasound use and rapid on-site evaluation, operator, cutoff points for "positive" cases, with inherent partial verification biases, resulting in a wide range of risk of malignancy, specificity, and sensitivity values. CONCLUSION: Analysis shows the large range is due to heterogeneity of the studies, which suffer from biases and variable statistical analysis that are ultimately included in any meta-analysis, detracting from the usefulness of the risk of malignancy derived by the meta-analysis. Components for ideal analyses of reporting systems are presented.
Cancer Cytopathol
· 2024 Nov · PMID 39097785
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BACKGROUND: The third edition of The Bethesda System (TBS) subclassifies the atypia of undetermined significance (AUS) category on the basis of the presence of nuclear atypia (AUS-Nuclear). This approach is supported by...BACKGROUND: The third edition of The Bethesda System (TBS) subclassifies the atypia of undetermined significance (AUS) category on the basis of the presence of nuclear atypia (AUS-Nuclear). This approach is supported by studies showing significant differences in the risk of malignancy (ROM) between AUS-Nuclear and those without (AUS-Other). Although aspirates of follicular neoplasms (FNs) are characterized by marked architectural atypia, TBS recognizes the infrequent occurrence of FNs with mild nuclear atypia (FN-Nuclear). Furthermore, limited studies have shown significant differences in ROM between FN-Nuclear and those without (FN-Other). This study explored potential differences in ROM, molecular-derived risk of malignancy (MDROM), and molecular alterations between FN-Nuclear and FN-Other. METHODS: A retrospective database search identified 93 FN aspirates. Cytology slides, molecular reports, and histologic follow-ups were reviewed. Both groups' benign call rate (BCR), positive call rate (PCR), MDROM, and ROM were computed and compared. RESULTS: Eighty-six percent of aspirates (80 of 93) comprised FN-Other, whereas 14% (13 of 93) were FN-Nuclear. The BCR and PCR for FN-Other were 51% and 49%, respectively. In contrast, they were 23% and 77% for FN-Nuclear, respectively. The MDROM significantly differed between FN-Other (30%) and FN-Nuclear (56%) (p < .05). HRAS mutation was the most common molecular alteration in FN-Nuclear, whereas mutations in NRAS/KRAS and copy number alterations were more common in FN-Other. The ROM1/ROM2 in FN-Other and FN-Nuclear were 16%/31% and 54%/88%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal that FN-Nuclear exhibits significantly higher MDROM and ROM than FN-Other, which provides support for a subclassification scheme for FNs based on the presence of nuclear atypia.