| Literature DB >> 12090425 |
Tjarda van Heek1, Anne E Rader, G Johan A Offerhaus, Denis M McCarthy, Michael Goggins, Ralph H Hruban, Robb E Wilentz.
Abstract
Between January 1997 and February 2000, 101 fine-needle pancreatic aspirates were obtained. After a cytologic diagnosis was made, possible molecular alterations were determined on the 94 aspirates with adequate tissue using a molecular panel (K-ras, p53, and DPC4 [MAD4] genes). The 94 aspirates were categorized as follows: diagnostic of adenocarcinoma, 48 (51%); atypical (suggestive of but not diagnostic of adenocarcinoma), 19 (20%); negative for adenocarcinoma, 25 (2 7%); diagnostic of a neoplasm other than adenocarcinoma, 2 (2%). Clinical follow-up revealed that 3 patients (12%) with negative cytologic diagnoses and 12 patients (63%) with atypical cytologic diagnoses had adenocarcinoma. Of 63 with a final diagnosis of adenocarcinoma, 42 (67%) had an alteration in at least 1 of the genes analyzed. In contrast, only 2 (6%) of 31 patients without adenocarcinoma had an alteration in 1 gene on the panel. Overall, the molecular analyses supported the diagnosis of adenocarcinoma in 6 (32%) of 19 aspirates originally diagnosed as atypical by cytology alone. A molecular panel that includes the K-ras, p53, and DPC4 (MAD4) genes correlates with and can supplement traditional cytologic diagnosis of pancreatic fine-needle aspirates.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12090425 DOI: 10.1309/5RQ0-JCQU-5XF2-51LQ
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Clin Pathol ISSN: 0002-9173 Impact factor: 2.493