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1.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the contribution of percutaneous cutting needle biopsy (PNB) subsequent to fine-needle aspiration (FNA) in the diagnosis of chest lesions. DESIGN: A retrospective review of 220 patients who underwent CT-guided FNA followed immediately by PNB performed at our center between 1988 and 1995 was undertaken. Thirty-eight patients were excluded because FNA and/or PNB specimens were nondiagnostic, yielding a study group of 182 patients. RESULTS: A diagnosis of malignancy was made in 141 (77.5%) and nonmalignancy in 41 (22.5%) cases. The yield of histospecific diagnosis due to FNA was marginally higher than PNB in malignant lesions (86.5% vs 78%, respectively). In contrast, PNB was superior to FNA for the histospecific diagnosis of benign lesions (87.8% for PNB vs 31.7% for FNA, p<0.00001) and lymphomas (88% for PNB vs 56% for FNA, p<0.05). In 58.8% of the patients with benign lesions and in 37.5% of the patients with lymphoma, PNB performances altered clinical management, either by avoiding further surgery or allowing specific medical treatment. Pneumothorax occurred in 24.7% of the cases but only five patients (2.7%) required hospitalization. CONCLUSION: PNB is extremely effective for making a specific diagnosis in benign lesions compared with FNA. PNB does not increase the yield of histospecific diagnosis for malignant lesions except for the subset of lymphoma, where it seems to provide important additional information in many instances. We recommend that FNA be performed as the initial procedure, followed by PNB in cases of equivocal diagnosis of carcinoma, for lymphoma and for suspected benign lesions.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: It is often difficult to determine whether a mass in the pancreas is benign or malignant. The goal was to evaluate whether endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) can reliably establish whether a mass is benign or malignant. METHODS: One hundred five patients with possible pancreatic tumors were referred for EUS. Those who were found to have a lesion suspicious for carcinoma and did not have a known malignancy also underwent EUS-guided FNA. RESULTS: A mass suspicious for cancer was identified in 73 patients, whereas inflammatory changes or a normal pancreas was noted in 32 patients. Four of the latter 32 patients were subsequently found to have cancer. EUS-guided FNA was performed on 47 of the 73 patients with a suspicious mass and was read as cancer in 27 patients, atypia in 10 patients, and benign in 10 patients. All 10 patients with atypia were subsequently confirmed to have cancer, and 6 of the 10 patients with a benign FNA were proved to have a tumor at surgery. EUS could differentiate the lesion as malignant with a sensitivity of 95%, specificity 88%, positive predictive value 95%, and negative predictive value 88%. CONCLUSIONS: Radial array EUS is helpful in supporting or refuting a diagnosis of cancer in a patient with a pancreatic mass. Although EUS-guided FNA can confirm the diagnosis, a negative FNA should not preclude exploration when clinically indicated.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECTIVE: To review our experience with fine needle aspiration of orbital lesions. STUDY DESIGN: Over an eight-year period, 24 orbital fine needle aspiration (FNA) samples were recorded, 22 of them adequate for interpretation. RESULTS: There were two benign tumors. There were 14 malignant tumors, 5 primary, 8 metastatic and 1 malignant and originating in the nasal cavity, invading the orbit. In two cases the original tissue diagnosis was incorrect and was revised by the fine needle aspirate. There were six nonneoplastic cases. In one case an infectious agent was identified, and another showed atypical lymphoid cells. Of the two nondiagnostic cases, one was compatible clinically with an orbital pseudotumor, and the other had no available follow-up. A specific diagnosis was achieved in 18 of 24 instances, or 75% of the cases. CONCLUSION: FNA is useful in the workup of an orbital lesion, leading to prompt diagnosis and treatment.  相似文献   

4.
Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is a sensitive and cost-effective method for evaluating breast lesions. However, the diagnosis of early premalignant lesions is less reliable by FNA because of a lack of distinctive cytological features. Accurately defining the risk of such lesions at the individual level may have significant impact in breast cancer prevention and management. The main objective of this preliminary study was to develop a method to study multiple biomarkers on archival FNA slides using quantitative fluorescence image analysis (QFIA). Biomarkers p53, G-actin, and DNA content were labeled with an immunofluorescence technique and measured by QFIA simultaneously on a single cell basis. QFIA allows the labeling and measurement procedures to be carried out in situ, without the need to remove cells from the slide while preserving the morphology of the cells. FNA slides from 72 incident patients were obtained for this study. Fifty-six cases had an adequate number of cells for the actual analysis (25 benign breast lesions, 14 proliferative breast diseases with nuclear atypia, and 17 malignant lesions). The DNA content (> or = 5c) and G-actin (average gray mean, > 90) were positive in 81% and 88% of malignant lesions, respectively. These were significantly higher than the corresponding positive rates in benign lesions (7% and 15%, respectively; P <0.01 for both). None of the benign cases were positive for G-actin and DNA simultaneously, and none of the malignant cases were negative for G-actin and DNA together. p53 was positive in 33% of malignant lesions and 8% of benign lesions (P >0.05). Our study demonstrates the feasibility of evaluating multiple biomarkers by QFIA on archival FNA-fixed specimens. The G-actin and DNA content assayed by QFIA may be potential intermediate end point markers for breast cancer individual risk assessment.  相似文献   

5.
M Rubin  K Horiuchi  N Joy  W Haun  R Read  E Ratzer  M Fenoglio 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1997,174(6):694-6; discussion 697-8
BACKGROUND: Palpable breast tumors have traditionally been diagnosed with open biopsy or core biopsy. We propose fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNA) as a reliable, cost-saving initial procedure in these patients. METHODS: Eighty-five palpable solid breast masses of the breast in 85 patients were classified by a combination of physical examination, mammography, and/or ultrasound as probably benign, indeterminate, or highly suspicious for cancer. All tumors had FNA biopsies. All patients had either a confirmatory open biopsy (55) or close clinical follow-up (30) with a mean follow-up of 29 months (range 6 to 36). RESULTS: Thirty-four patients classified as clinically benign had a benign FNA biopsy. No cancers were detected in this group by either open surgical biopsy or clinical follow-up. Twenty patients were classified clinically as indeterminate. All had FNA biopsies, and 6 were either positive for cancer or suspicious for cancer. Fourteen patients had negative FNA biopsies. Five of the 6 abnormal biopsies had cancer on open biopsies. The 1 false-positive result occurred in a lactating patient. Thirty-one patients were classified clinically as highly suspicious for cancer. Twenty-three were confirmed as cancer with FNA biopsy. Eight needed open surgical biopsy to confirm cancer. All 31 patients clinically suspicious for cancer had cancer. In patients classified clinically as highly suspicious or probably benign, FNA was a reliable first diagnostic step (100% positive predictive value, 100% specificity, 87% sensitivity, and 89% negative predictive value). CONCLUSIONS: Fine needle aspiration biopsy of solid palpable breast lesions should be the diagnostic procedure of choice for those patients classified clinically as probably benign or clinically as highly suspicious for cancer. Cost analysis revealed elimination of an open biopsy in such cases would save $1,100 per patient. For highly suspicious cases, a negative fine needle aspiration should not deter an open surgical biopsy. For patients classified as indeterminate, fine needle aspiration biopsy results are not reliable enough to determine treatment.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Although fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is 90% sensitive in the detection of papillary carcinoma (PC) of the thyroid, its specificity has been reported as low as 52%. Consequently, patients who have an FNA suspicious for PC may undergo operation for a benign process. The ribonucleoprotein telomerase has been noted to be activated in a wide variety of carcinomas. We examined 30 PCs for telomerase activity to determine whether this would be a useful adjunct to FNA in the diagnosis of lesions suspicious for PC. METHODS: Standard telomere repeat amplification protocol assays were performed on fresh frozen tissue samples from 30 PCs, 3 benign nodules, and 10 normal thyroids. RESULTS: Telomerase activity was documented in 20 of 30 (67%) of the PCs, 0 of 3 benign nodules, and 0 of 10 normal thyroids. In all, 11 of the 20 PCs had FNA cytology that was nondiagnostic of PC, and 2 of the benign nodules had FNA that was suspicious for PC. CONCLUSIONS: The telomerase assay appears useful in the distinction of benign from malignant thyroid lesions that have FNA suspicious for but not diagnostic of PC. On the basis of these findings, a prospective trial examining telomerase activity in FNAs suspicious for thyroid cancer has been initiated.  相似文献   

7.
The study aims to determine the cytological pattern of thyroid lesions, in addition to the utility and accuracy of fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology as an initial diagnostic method in the investigation of these lesions among Saudi patients. Four hundred and seventy-nine (479) FNAs were performed on patients presenting with diffuse or nodular thyroid enlargement to the endocrinology clinic at King Khalid University Hospital in Riyadh during the period September 1993 to September 1996. The results of the FNA and the 125 histological diagnoses obtained from the subsequent partial and subtotal thyroidectomies were retrospectively and independently reviewed and compared by two cytopathologists. The results of the FNA cytological diagnosis showed that 372 patients (77.7%) had benign lesions, 24 (5%)) had lesions which were suspected of malignancy, 25 (5.2%) had malignant neoplasms, and 58 (12.1%) had FNAs which were inadequate for cytological assessment. Colloid and adenomatous nodules were the most common benign lesions reported (47.8%). Papillary carcinoma was the most common malignant neoplasm (4.2%). Despite the relatively limited number of patients who underwent surgery, cytohistopathology combined with statistical analysis of the results showed that our FNA accuracy rate is in the region of 94.4% with a sensitivity of 78% and a specificity of 100%. In addition, the negative predictive value (NPV) and the positive predictive value (PPV) of FNA thyroid cytology were 93% and 100% respectively. Our findings indicate that FNA cytology can be used effectively in the evaluation of both nodular and diffuse thyroid lesions whilst cytopathologist should be aware of the potential diagnostic pitfalls and the limitations of the procedure in the diagnosis of follicular, cystic, and small neoplasms, the positive identification of thyroiditis and most cases of neoplasia by itself provides justification for FNA.  相似文献   

8.
To determine the origin and nature of mucinlike material in fine-needle aspiration (FNA) smears of the breast in noncancerous breast lesions, we studied breast FNA smears from four patients. All smears contained epithelial cells floating in a mucinlike background, which raised suspicion for mucinous (colloid) carcinoma. Mucicarmine stain was performed on one smear from each case. Subsequent tissue biopsy specimens were studied using mucicarmine, periodic acid-Schiff with and without diastase, and alcian blue stains at pH 2.7 and 0.9 on selected tissue sections. Correlation of the cytologic and histologic findings of each lesion was performed. The mucinlike background in all four FNA smears stained strongly with mucicarmine. Corresponding biopsy specimens revealed pseudoangiomatous hyperplasia in the first case, fibroadenoma and atypical ductal hyperplasia in the second, benign phyllodes tumor in the third, and fibroadenoma in the fourth. Each lesion in cases 1 to 3 was associated closely with fibrocystic changes. In case 4, cystic changes were located within the fibroadenoma. On tissue sections of all four cases, the cyst contents and 10% to 50% of normal lobule and duct contents stained with mucicarmine, indicating that the cyst contents were the most probable source of mucin in the FNA smears. The presence of pools of mucicarmine-positive material in FNA smears of the breast is not an exclusive feature of mucinous carcinoma; mucicarmine-positive mucin can arise from benign cystic changes as well as from normal lobules and ducts.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) immunoassay and Ki-ras genotyping as adjuncts to the cytologic diagnosis of pancreatic fine needle aspirates (FNAs). STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective study of 30 patients with pancreatic masses evaluated with CEA immunoassay and gel or hybridization analysis of allele-specific polymerase chain reaction for mutant Ki-ras (codons 12 and 13). DNA was isolated from fixed, paraffin-embedded samples. Diagnoses were correlated with cytologic evaluations and patient outcome. RESULTS: Diagnoses included 17 pancreatic carcinomas, 3 other malignancies and 10 benign lesions. Sixty-five percent of all FNAs had mutated Ki-ras, and 42% of samples with altered Ki-ras had multiple mutations. Replicate FNA samplings in five of six patients had concordant genotypes. Sensitivities for diagnosis were as follows: cytology alone, 76%; CEA alone, 82%; Ki-ras alone, 82%; cytology plus CEA, 100%; cytology plus Ki-ras, 94%. Although specificities for Ki-ras (30%) and CEA (50%) individually were low, elevated CEA level and mutated Ki-ras in a sample with negative cytology strongly indicated false negative cytology. CONCLUSION: The addition of either or both the CEA assay and Ki-ras mutation analysis enhances the sensitivity of the cytologic diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma by FNA.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: The clinical, mammographic and low grade cytologic features of mucinous carcinoma can make it difficult to diagnose by fine needle aspiration (FNA). Fine needle aspirates of mucinous carcinoma were reviewed with the mammographic findings to improve the diagnostic criteria and specificity for FNA. STUDY DESIGN: All aspirates were reviewed for cytologic criteria and cellularity, atypia and single epithelial cells (SEC). A nuclear grade was assigned to each aspirate. The mammographic findings were correlated with the FNA diagnoses. RESULTS: Forty-five patients with an aspirate and confirmed diagnosis of mucinous carcinoma were identified. The clinical impressions were: benign tissue (5), fibroadenoma (6) and cancer (32). The initial cytologic diagnoses were: adenocarcinoma (32), atypical/suspicious for cancer (11), insufficient (1) and negative (1). The cytologic findings showed smears with increased cellularity (35/45 cases) and minimal atypia. SEC with eccentrically located nuclei and eosinophilic cytoplasm were numerous. The assigned nuclear grade was as follows: grade 1, 16 cases; grade 2, 20 cases; and grade 3, 6 cases. Abundant mucin was present in Papanicolaou-stained slides in 23 cases; focal mucin was observed in 14 cases. The mammograms showed a smoothly outlined to lobulated mass with only slight irregularities identified. CONCLUSION: Mucinous carcinoma has a cytologic pattern that includes increased cellularity, with numerous single cells and abundant mucin. Although the mammographic findings may mimic a benign lesion, in the most patients a specific diagnosis of mucinous carcinoma can be made by FNA.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: To delineate the cytomorphologic features seen in cancer of the breast during pregnancy and lactation, to compare them to the cytomorphologic parameters in benign conditions and to determine the feasibility of differentiating features of malignant breast carcinoma from those of benign breast lesions during pregnancy. STUDY DESIGN: The study group consisted of pregnant or lactating women with breast carcinoma and with benign breast lesions who underwent fine needle aspiration (FNA) of the breast lesions. The findings of FNA were reviewed, analyzed, tabulated and correlated with the pathologic diagnosis of the breast biopsies. RESULTS: Eleven patients had malignant cytomorphologic changes, including increased cellularity, multilayering, enlarged and pleomorphic nuclei, single or multiple nucleoli, mitosis and numerous isolated tumor cells. Secretory changes were scanty. The background was foamy and necrotic. FNA of the benign lesions showed a biphasic cell pattern with cohesion; minimal nuclear pleomorphism; single, regular nucleoli; and naked nuclei in a granular background with foamy macrophages. Increased cellularity with nuclear atypia, single cells and a dirty background was seen in benign and malignant conditions. CONCLUSION: The main cytologic features that differentiate breast carcinoma from benign conditions during pregnancy and lactation are crowding and overlapping of nuclei, dyscohesion and enlarged, pleomorphic nuclei with irregular nuclear membranes, coarse nuclear chromatin and mitoses. Pregnancy-related hyperplastic changes with atypia can potentially result in a false positive diagnosis of carcinoma.  相似文献   

12.
AIMS: To evaluate the correlation of fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology and frozen section biopsy in the diagnosis of thyroid nodules. METHODS: The medical records of 662 patients who underwent FNA cytology of the thyroid and thyroid surgery were analysed. Frozen section biopsies were taken from 586 of the 662 patients. The diagnostic correlations of FNA cytology, frozen section, and both FNA cytology and frozen section with definitive histological assessment were evaluated. RESULTS: Among the 662 patients who received FNA cytology, there were 356 cases (53.8%) diagnosed as benign, 114 cases (17.2%) as malignant, 148 cases (22.4%) as indeterminate, and 44 cases (6.6%) as unsatisfactory. The positive predictive value for the detection of malignancy by FNA cytology was 92.1% and the negative predictive value was 95.2%. The incidence of malignancy in the indeterminate cytological diagnosis was 23%. The diagnosis from frozen sections was benign in 445 cases (75.9%), malignant in 134 cases (22.9%), and deferred in 7 cases (1.2%). By frozen section, the positive and negative predictive values were 97% and 95.5%, respectively. Diagnostic accuracy up to 98% was achieved when FNA cytology and frozen section diagnoses were in agreement. No false positives were observed when FNA cytology and frozen sections were both positive for malignancy. When FNA cytology and frozen section diagnoses were discordant, frozen section showed a higher accuracy (78.9%) than FNA cytology (21.1%). In the face of an indeterminate or unsatisfactory cytological diagnosis, the diagnostic accuracy of frozen sections reached 92.6%. CONCLUSIONS: The results confirm that FNA cytology is a useful tool in the initial evaluation of thyroid nodules. Intraoperative frozen section is a valuable procedure to confirm the cytological diagnosis and identify malignancy in patients with indeterminate or unsatisfactory cytological diagnosis. With reliance on frozen sections as an intraoperative guide of thyroid surgery, the possibility of unnecessary extensive surgery and the need for the second operation are considerably lower.  相似文献   

13.
Diagnosis of lesions of the gastrointestinal tract and adjacent structures is possible using an imaging modality, endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS). Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is a suitable and cost-effective technique for obtaining cytohistologic material to confirm the diagnosis. EUS is capable of both characterizing the lesion and then guiding the FNA under real-time (RT) ultrasound guidance using a through-the-scope needle aspiration system. The goal of this study was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of this technique and to describe the clinicopathologic features. Sixty patients underwent EUS-guided RTFNA of 64 lesions, including pancreas (n = 45), periluminal lymph nodes (n = 12), mediastinal and retroperitoneal masses (n = 4), and hepatobiliary masses (n = 3). Follow-up data were obtained by surgery, histopathology, or clinical course. Thirty-one lesions were malignant, eight were atypical/suspicious, 16 were non-neoplastic, and nine were non-diagnostic. Of the 55 lesions with sufficient material for interpretation, 54 had follow-up confirmation of the RTFNA diagnosis. The calculated sensitivity and specificity for malignancy was 90% and 100%, respectively. Diagnostic accuracy for malignancy was excellent for gastrointestinal associated lymph nodes (100%), mediastinal and retroperitoneal masses (100%), somewhat less so for pancreatic tumors (94%), and poor for hepatobiliary lesions (33%). EUS-guided RTFNA is accurate for sampling small gastrointestinal tract-associated lesions. EUS-guided RTFNA should be considered as a procedure of choice in selected patients when the results will influence management decisions.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: As fine-needle aspiration (FNA) has become a critical component of the investigation of palpable breast masses, false-negative diagnoses have become a major concern, prompting reevaluation of the definition of specimen adequacy. Although cytopathologists agree that a number of parameters relate to the adequacy of an FNA specimen, there is no unanimity on the role of epithelial cell quantitation in the determination of an adequate FNA. To better understand the significance of epithelial cellularity, false-negative FNA samples from palpable breast lesions were reviewed. METHODS: False-negative FNA smears of palpable breast masses that had been performed and assessed immediately by cytopathologists were retrieved from the files of The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, and the number of epithelial cell clusters (ECCs) was determined. Aspirates were classified as adequate if a total of six or more ECCs (each comprised of at least five to ten well preserved cells) were present on all slides, or as inadequate if fewer than six ECCs were present. RESULTS: From 4455 aspirates of palpable breast masses, 51 false-negative aspirates were identified, 41 of which were available for review. No interpretative errors were identified. Twenty-one FNAs (51.2%) were classified as adequate and 20 FNAs (48.8%) as inadequate. The adequate false-negative aspirates contained between 8 to 100 ECCs. A comparison of adequate and inadequate false-negative specimens showed no significant differences in the mean age of patients (56.4 years vs. 57.8 years), the mean number of FNA passes (3.7 passes vs. 3.0 passes), the mean palpation size of the lesions (2.8 cm vs. 2.9 cm), or the mean pathologic size of the lesions (2.1 cm vs. 2.2 cm). Cases of invasive lobular carcinoma were more common in the false-negative smears with fewer than six ECCs. CONCLUSIONS: Including the number of ECCs as a parameter of adequacy could reduce the rate of false-negative FNA diagnoses of palpable breast masses by approximately 50%. However, the presence or even abundance of ECCs does not eliminate the potential for a false-negative cytologic diagnosis. Cytologic diagnoses must be correlated with clinical and imaging findings (the triple test) to reduce the rate of false-negative cases, but benign triple test results do not entirely exclude the possibility of carcinoma, and such cases require periodic follow-up.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: To compare, contrast and analyze the value and limitations of fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology and core biopsy (CB) in a rural setting. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of 100 FNA cytology and 100 CB results of mass lesions from 193 patients matched for age, sex and body organs, and referred for FNA or CB in rural New South Wales, Australia, between September 1990 and May 1996. RESULTS: FNA cytology and CB results from 193 patients were analyzed, based on anatomic location and cytologic criteria. Sites included lung, retroperitoneum, liver, breast, kidney, pancreas and ovary. The FNA group contained 6 inadequate, 14 benign, 3 atypical, 6 suspicious and 71 malignant cases, whereas the CB group had 1 inadequate, 24 benign and 75 malignant conditions. The inadequate samples in both groups were due to technical difficulty in obtaining representative material. The indeterminate (atypical and suspicious) group, which was the main pitfall of FNA, contained 4 low grade carcinomas, 3 low grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and 2 fibrocystic breast changes. The benign FNA group comprised 8 cysts, 5 inflammatory/reactive conditions and 1 benign tumor/hamartoma, whereas the benign CB group contained 11 cysts, 9 inflammatory/reactive conditions and 4 benign tumors. CONCLUSION: FNA was comparable to CB at most anatomic sites. CB occasionally offered additional information. This slight advantage was due to the availability of tissue from the first and often the only pass for assessment of architecture and performance of ancillary tests, which obviated the need for further sampling. On-site assessment of the core imprints at the time of the procedure by the highly skilled and experienced interventional cytopathologist was responsible for limiting the number of attempts to one core in most of the instances, therefore minimizing complications. Pathologists are encouraged to become more familiar with the criteria of aspiration cytology, which has proven its validity in the new cost-conscious environment. Despite the recent surge in the popularity of core biopsy, FNA cytology, when practiced in a multidisciplinary setting, with involvement of pathologists, radiologists and clinicians, is an extremely accurate test with very high sensitivity, which approaches that of surgical pathology, and specificity very similar to that of frozen section. FNA has a positive predictive value for a malignant diagnosis of almost 100%. FNA is a well-tolerated, relatively noninvasive test with a very low risk of complications.  相似文献   

16.
Neoplasms of the small bowel are rare lesions that account for less than 5% of all gastrointestinal tumors. Although the differential diagnosis for a small bowel tumor is extensive, various small bowel neoplasms have characteristic features at computed tomography (CT) that may aid in making a diagnosis. Small bowel adenocarcinoma may appear at CT as an annular lesion, a discrete nodular mass, or an ulcerative lesion. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma may appear as a segmental bulky mass that gradually merges into the normal bowel wall. Lymphoma is characteristically associated with marked luminal dilatation. Carcinoid tumor may appear as an ill-defined homogeneous mass that displaces bowel loops. Calcification and desmoplastic reaction in a mesenteric mass suggest the diagnosis of carcinoid tumor. Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), both benign and malignant, may be submucosal, subserosal, or intraluminal. The CT appearance of a GIST may include a sharply defined mass with homogeneous attenuation, sometimes with calcification. Lipoma appears at CT as a well-circumscribed, intraluminal homogeneous mass with fat attenuation. Most malignant small bowel tumors are actually metastases that have spread intraperitoneally, hematogenously, or by local extension. Intraperitoneal seeding usually manifests at CT as multiple small nodular metastases along the small bowel serosa, mesentery, and omentum. In patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, nonneoplastic lesions may mimic small bowel neoplasms.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVE: When fine needle aspiration cytology (FNA) of the thyroid is performed as a first-line test, the cytopathologist cannot be fully informed about the patient's data. The authors investigated whether this decreases the accuracy of FNA and results in consequences for the patient. STUDY DESIGN: FNA smears of 202 patients, 190 with benign and 12 with malignant thyroid disease, were reevaluated, supplying the cytopathologist first with only information from the case history known already at the initial admission, and subsequently with full data. RESULTS: The FNA diagnoses were corrected in 13 cases; in 8/13 they showed a more serious finding. The therapeutic modality was changed in only one case. No corrections were made in the ultimately malignant cases. CONCLUSION: In several cases the cytopathologist may be handicapped by receiving only partial information about the patient, but in our patients this had no demonstrable adverse consequences. Thus, FNA can be performed upon patient's admission.  相似文献   

18.
The benefits of the use of computerized tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic surgical techniques for the management of intrinsic brainstem masses diagnosed from clinical evaluation and imaging studies were evaluated vis-à-vis the risks involved in 71 consecutive patients. Seventy-two procedures were performed. The masses were diffuse, involving two or three contiguous brainstem segments, in 60 patients and focal in 11 patients. On the CT scans, 25 patients had hypodense nonenhancing masses, two had isodense nonenhancing masses, 19 had ring-enhancing masses, and 25 had heterogeneously enhancing masses. A positive biopsy was obtained in 68 of 69 patients (98.5%) undergoing a biopsy procedure. In nine patients (12.6%) with suspected malignant masses a benign pathology was diagnosed (four tuberculomas, two epidermoid cysts, one pyogenic abscess, one epidermal cyst, and one case of encephalitis). Additionally, fluid from cystic masses could be aspirated in eight cases, providing benefit in six (four patients had benign lesions and two had neoplastic lesions). Thereby, a total of 13 patients (18.3%) were deemed to have benefited from the surgery (two patients were included in both categories). Patients with focal masses and ring-enhancing masses had the highest proportion of benign lesions (60% and 36.8%, respectively) and therefore derived the most benefit from histological verification. There was no procedure-related mortality. One patient (1.4%) suffered permanent morbidity and four others (5.6%) had transient worsening attributable to the procedure. The authors conclude that CT-guided stereotactic surgery of the brainstem is safe and reliable. Histological verification of all enhancing (especially ring-enhancing) and focal brainstem masses should be undertaken to identify patients with benign nonneoplastic lesions. Selected patients with diffuse hypodense nonenhancing masses with atypical clinical or imaging features may also benefit from stereotactic biopsy. Even in these patients the lack of enhancement on a contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance image, rather than the diffuse location of the tumor alone, should form the basis for diagnosing a malignant glioma. The main value of stereotactic surgery lies in the identification of benign masses in a significant proportion of patients with intrinsic brainstem masses and in providing a rapid and safe method for evacuation of the contents of cystic masses.  相似文献   

19.
Large-core (14g) needle biopsy (CNB) of the breast is a new diagnostic modality increasingly being used to evaluate patients with mammographic abnormalities. Two hundred twenty-four CNBs were performed on 198 patients. Surgical follow-up was available in 64 cases (28.6%). Overall concordance rate was 93.8% (60 of 64 cases). Of the four discordant cases, two were diagnosed as atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) on CNB; on excision, these cases showed cribriform ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS); two remaining cases, diagnosed on CNB as ADH versus DCIS, showed invasive carcinoma (DCIS with invasive component and infiltrating cribriform carcinoma, respectively) on excisional biopsy. Malignancy, primary (52) or metastatic (5), was identified in 57 cases (25.4%); 47 of these patients underwent surgical excision, and the diagnosis was confirmed in all of these cases. Of 51 cases with radiographic evidence of microcalcifications, 48 (94%) had microcalcifications in the CNB: 30 (62.5%) were benign, 11 (22.9%) were malignant, and 7 (14.6%) were diagnosed as ADH. In the remaining three cases (1.3%), only benign breast tissue without microcalcifications was seen, and the lesion was considered to have been missed. Biopsy specimens were obtained from 173 lesions because of the presence of a mass: 125 (72.3%) were benign, 45 (26%) were malignant, and 3 (1.7%) were diagnosed as ADH. Follow-up was available in 118 patients with benign lesions: all were mammographically stable or decreased at 6 or 12 months; no follow-up was available for the remaining patients. CNB of the breast is a highly sensitive (96.9%) and specific (100%) technique for management of patients with mammographic abnormalities. The histologic findings should be correlated with the mammographic appearance, and an attempt should be made to achieve a specific diagnosis in all lesions, particularly masses. The diagnosis of ADH should always prompt excisional biopsy because of a high frequency of false-negative results caused by sampling errors or underestimation.  相似文献   

20.
This article describes the use of computer-based analytical techniques to define nuclear size, shape, and texture features. These features are then used to distinguish between benign and malignant breast cytology. The benign and malignant cell samples used in this study were obtained by fine needle aspiration (FNA) from a consecutive series of 569 patients: 212 with cancer and 357 with fibrocystic breast masses. Regions of FNA preparations to be analyzed were converted by a video camera to computer files that were displayed on a computer monitor. Nuclei to be analyzed were roughly outlined by an operator using a mouse. Next, the computer generated a "snake" that precisely enclosed each designated nucleus. The computer calculated 10 features for each nucleus. The ability to correctly classify samples as benign or malignant on the basis of these features was determined by inductive machine learning and logistic regression. Cross-validation was used to test the validity of the predicted diagnosis. The logistic regression cross validated classification accuracy was 96.2% and the inductive machine learning cross-validated classification accuracy was 97.5%. Our computerized system provides a probability that a sample is malignant. Should this probability fall between 30% and 70%, the sample is considered "suspicious," in the same way a visually graded FNA may be termed suspicious. All of the 128 consecutive cases obtained since the introduction of this system were correctly diagnosed, but nine benign aspirates fell into the suspicious category.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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