Literature DB >> 16210924

The significance of benign endometrial cells in cervicovaginal smears.

Oluwole Fadare1, Mohiedean Ghofrani, Mary S Chacho, Vinita Parkash.   

Abstract

The success of the routine Papanicolaou (pap) smear in reducing the incidence and mortality of cervical cancer has been chronicled extensively. Unfortunately, endometrial cancer, the most common malignancy of the gynecologic tract, continues to lack a screening modality of comparable efficacy. It is generally accepted that the Papanicolau test has a low sensitivity for detecting endometrial disease. Nonetheless, it remains true that endometrial cells are not uncommonly identified on routine cervicovaginal smears and along with each case comes an associated responsibility for pathologists to assess cytologic features, assign a potential clinical significance, and make a decision on reporting this finding. When endometrial cells with an entirely normal cytologic appearance are identified on an otherwise unremarkable cervicovaginal smear, the central question raised is whether such cells are exfoliating physiologically or whether their exfoliation is pathologic in response to an underlying endometrial disease. Additionally, in the former scenario, could subsets of patients be defined in which the reporting of this finding is deemed unnecessary in the cytologic report? In this contribution, we explore the clinical significance of finding normal endometrial cells in cervicovaginal smears based on a review of the medical literature of the last half-century. The historical and evidentiary basis for the Bethesda 2001 recommendations, which calls for the reporting of cytologically benign endometrial cells only in patients 40 years and older, is reviewed in detail.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16210924     DOI: 10.1097/01.pap.0000184174.76221.eb

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Anat Pathol        ISSN: 1072-4109            Impact factor:   3.875


  2 in total

1.  Clinical significance of benign endometrial cells found in papanicolaou tests of Turkish women aged 40 years and older.

Authors:  Gozde Kir; Ahmet Gocmen; Handan Cetiner; Cumhur Selcuk Topal; Muberra Segmen Yilmaz; Murat Hakan Karabulut
Journal:  J Cytol       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 1.000

2.  Significance of finding benign endometrial cells in women 40-45 versus 46 years or older on Papanicolaou tests and histologic follow-up.

Authors:  Shanna M Colletti; Ghassan A Tranesh; Aziza Nassar
Journal:  Cytojournal       Date:  2017-09-25       Impact factor: 2.091

  2 in total

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