Literature DB >> 28478453

Frozen Sections in Pleural Pathology: A Valuable Tool.

Georgia Karpathiou1, Marios Froudarakis, Fabien Forest, Mousa Mobarki, Arnaud Patoir, Pierre Gay, Jean Michel Vergnon, Olivier Tiffet, Michel Peoc'h.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Knowledge of pleural malignancy can lead to immediate pleurodesis during thoracoscopy. However, the accuracy of pleural frozen sections is largely unknown.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the accuracy of frozen sections in pleural tumor pathology.
METHODS: A total of 156 frozen pleural sections performed with the question of malignancy were retrospectively reviewed. The original frozen sections were compared to the permanent section slides which were considered as the gold standard. The influence of the following parameters on the frozen section response was evaluated: specimen size, clinical information, as well as the processing by a specialized pulmonary pathologist or not. The reasons of discrepancies were categorized as sampling errors or interpretation errors.
RESULTS: Frozen sections made up 16.4% of 951 pleural biopsies performed in the same time period. Accurate diagnosis was feasible in 92.3% of the cases. There were 7 (4.5%) deferred (inconclusive) cases and 5 (3.2%) discrepant cases. Sensitivity of the method was 96.26%, specificity 97.87%, the positive predictive value was 99.04%, and the negative predictive value was 92%. There was no association between the responses given during frozen section and specimen size, clinical information, or the evaluation by a specialized pulmonary pathologist. Four of the 12 cases were sampling errors, while 8 cases were interpretation errors mostly made in the absence of fat tissue invasion. Thus, paucicellular lesions without prominent invasion - fat invasion or haphazardly invading cellular proliferation - were those posing most of the difficulties during frozen section.
CONCLUSIONS: Frozen sections are a highly accurate tool in pleural pathology. Thus, they can be used when an immediate pleurodesis is requested.
© 2017 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mesothelioma; Pleural metastasis; Pleurodesis; Thoracoscopy

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28478453     DOI: 10.1159/000474952

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Respiration        ISSN: 0025-7931            Impact factor:   3.580


  3 in total

1.  Clinical long-term outcome of non-specific pleuritis (NSP) after surgical or medical thoracoscopy.

Authors:  Georgia Karpathiou; Stavros Anevlavis; Olivier Tiffet; Francois Casteillo; Mousa Mobarki; Valentine Mismetti; Paschalis Ntolios; Andreas Koulelidis; Tiffany Trouillon; Nicolas Zadel; Sirine Hathroubi; Michel Peoc'h; Marios E Froudarakis
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 2.895

2.  Factors associated with discrepancy between fresh frozen and permanent biopsy from medical thoracoscopy: single center analysis of 172 medical flexible thoracoscopy cases.

Authors:  Jeong Uk Lim; Jongyeol Oh; Hyung Woo Kim; Woo Ho Ban; Eun Su Park; Jick Hwan Ha; Ju Sang Kim; Sang Haak Lee
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 2.895

Review 3.  Inflammation of the Pleural Cavity: A Review on Pathogenesis, Diagnosis and Implications in Tumor Pathophysiology.

Authors:  Georgia Karpathiou; Michel Péoc'h; Anand Sundaralingam; Najib Rahman; Marios E Froudarakis
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-10       Impact factor: 6.639

  3 in total

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