Literature DB >> 20862703

Should adequacy criteria in cervicovaginal cytology be modified after radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or hysterectomy?

Chien-Hsing Lu1, Chia-Che Chang, Esther Shih-Chu Ho, Su-Ju Chen, Shu-Jiuan Lin, Tsai-Feng Fu, Ming-Chen Chang.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The general criterion of an unsatisfactory Papanicolaou (Pap) test in the 2001 version of the Bethesda system is not applicable to patients after treatment with radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or hysterectomy. The current study was performed to determine whether specimen adequacy criteria for Pap tests should be modified for these conditions.
METHODS: Consecutive patients who underwent conventional Pap tests between March and August 2006 were reviewed. The original reports were done according to the 2001 Bethesda system, with cellularity criteria modified in patients with a history of radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or hysterectomy. The slides of these patients were reviewed again. The degrees of cellularity, obscuring red blood cells, and inflammation were recorded.
RESULTS: The final analyses included 7033 patients for which there were complete data. The original interpretation was unsatisfactory in 4.4% of all samples. When the 1337 slides obtained from patients with a history of radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and/or hysterectomy were reviewed using the general satisfactory threshold of >8000 squamous cells/slide and <75% of the epithelium obscured, the incidence of unsatisfactory Pap tests increased from 4.3% to 13.2% (176 of 1337 slides). The odds ratios for unsatisfactory Pap tests for a history of radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and age >50 years were 2.70, 2.51, and 1.39, respectively. The majority of unsatisfactory Pap tests were because of low cellularity. The lower limits of adequate cellularity after radiotherapy or chemotherapy can be set at 2000 cells/slide, which can lower the unsatisfactory rate while at the same time resulting in no increase in the false-negative rate. Hysterectomy alone was not found to be associated with unsatisfactory Pap tests.
CONCLUSIONS: In patients who received pelvic radiotherapy or chemotherapy, the incidence of low-cellularity Pap tests was unacceptably high. A lower cellularity (estimated 2000 cell/slide) could be used as a satisfactory threshold.
Copyright © 2010 American Cancer Society.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20862703     DOI: 10.1002/cncy.20110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Cytopathol        ISSN: 1934-662X            Impact factor:   5.284


  3 in total

1.  Predictors of Unsatisfactory Conventional Pap Smears.

Authors:  Reetika Sharma; Marie Moses Ambroise; Anita Ramdas; Kandasamy Ravichandran
Journal:  J Midlife Health       Date:  2021-01-21

2.  Pelvic radiotherapy for cervical cancer affects importantly the reproducibility of cytological alterations evaluation.

Authors:  Fernanda A Lucena; Ricardo F A Costa; Maira D Stein; Carlos E M C Andrade; Geórgia F Cintra; Marcelo A Vieira; Rozany M Dufloth; José Humberto T G Fregnani; Ricardo Dos Reis
Journal:  BMC Clin Pathol       Date:  2018-10-05

3.  Clinical characteristics and a 2-year follow-up of unsatisfactory conventional Pap smears: a retrospective case-control study.

Authors:  Chin-Tzu Tien; Pei-Chen Li; Chi-Jui Chen; Dah-Ching Ding
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-13       Impact factor: 4.996

  3 in total

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