Literature DB >> 23899058

Cytology of spontaneous nipple discharge--is it worth it? Performance of nipple discharge preparations in the College of American Pathologists Interlaboratory Comparison Program in Nongynecologic Cytopathology.

Ann T Moriarty1, Mary R Schwartz, Rodolfo Laucirica, Christine N Booth, Manon Auger, Nicole E Thomas, Rhona J Souers.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: The usefulness of spontaneous nipple discharge analysis is controversial. Nipple discharge preparations are rare in clinical practice and malignant cases are exceptional. The College of American Pathologists Interlaboratory Comparison Program in Nongynecologic Cytopathology has included nipple discharge preparations since its inception.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate participant responses in the College of American Pathologists Interlaboratory Comparison Program in Nongynecologic Cytopathology to assess the accuracy of cytologic interpretation of nipple discharge preparation.
DESIGN: General diagnostic category (benign, suspicious, malignant), participant type (pathologist, cytotechnologist), stain (Papanicolaou, modified Giemsa), and program year (2005-2009) were analyzed using χ(2) and a nonlinear mixed model for slide factor correlation structure.
RESULTS: Of 2506 responses, 1280 (51%) were malignant, 171 (7%) were papillary, and 1055 (42%) were benign. There were 222 discordant general category responses with a false-positive/suspicious rate of 12.8% and a false-negative rate of 3.4%. The most common false-negative diagnosis was mastitis/abscess (125 of 1272 responses; 9.8%). The most common false-positive response was papillary lesion (26 of 457 responses; 5.7%). There were no differences between stains or years. Cytotechnologists performed better than pathologists; pathologists had a higher false-negative rate than cytotechnologists (15.3% versus 7.9%, P < .001).
CONCLUSIONS: There is poor accuracy in evaluating nipple discharge preparation in the College of American Pathologists Interlaboratory Comparison Program in Nongynecologic Cytopathology. If the findings in the program parallel clinical practice, nipple discharge preparations may adversely impact patient care. A benign nipple discharge cytologic diagnosis does not exclude malignancy, and the false-positive/suspicious rate requires confirmation of a malignant nipple discharge prior to definitive patient management.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23899058     DOI: 10.5858/arpa.2012-0231-CP

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med        ISSN: 0003-9985            Impact factor:   5.534


  4 in total

1.  The investigation and management of unilateral nipple discharge.

Authors:  S E Clark; A Agrawal; S Laws; T Graja; L A Sheehan; C Laban; F Scutt
Journal:  Ann R Coll Surg Engl       Date:  2020-04-01       Impact factor: 1.891

2.  Authors attain comparable or slightly higher rates of citation publishing in an open access journal (CytoJournal) compared to traditional cytopathology journals - A five year (2007-2011) experience.

Authors:  Nora K Frisch; Romil Nathan; Yasin K Ahmed; Vinod B Shidham
Journal:  Cytojournal       Date:  2014-04-29       Impact factor: 2.091

3.  Diagnostic performance of digital breast tomosynthesis in female patients with nipple discharge.

Authors:  Sanja Barsic Ostojic; Lora Grbanovic; Ana Tonklin; Lucija Kovacevic; Zlatko Marusic; Maja Prutki
Journal:  Cancer Rep (Hoboken)       Date:  2022-02-10

4.  Galactography is not an obsolete investigation in the evaluation of pathological nipple discharge.

Authors:  Aleksandr Istomin; Amro Masarwah; Marja Pitkänen; Sarianna Joukainen; Anna Sutela; Ritva Vanninen; Mazen Sudah
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-10-08       Impact factor: 3.240

  4 in total

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