Cheng-Han Yang1, Li-Yu Lee1. 1. Department of Pathology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Chang Gung University College of Medicine, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
Abstract
AIMS: Using intraoperative frozen sections to diagnose pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma is always challenging. However, an accurate diagnosis is needed to guide surgical management and prevent unnecessary treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate the most frequently misdiagnosed histological patterns and evaluate the potential diagnostic pitfalls of using frozen sections. METHODS AND RESULTS: We reviewed retrospectively 59 cases of sclerosing pneumocytoma that underwent an intraoperative frozen section examination. All original frozen section slides and permanent section slides were reviewed. The rate of accurate diagnosis using frozen sections was 44.1%, the deferral rate was 15.3% and 10 cases (16.9%) were misdiagnosed as malignancy. A solid-predominant pattern is misdiagnosed more frequently than other growth patterns. We also summarised the five major diagnostic pitfalls, including hypercellularity, glandular spaces, desmoplasia-like sclerosis, cellular atypia and coagulative necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to evaluating the tumour circumscription and identifying the various growth patterns, we propose that the key to avoiding a misdiagnosis is to recognise the dual-cell populations in a tumour, i.e. cuboidal surface cells and stromal round cells.
AIMS: Using intraoperative frozen sections to diagnose pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma is always challenging. However, an accurate diagnosis is needed to guide surgical management and prevent unnecessary treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate the most frequently misdiagnosed histological patterns and evaluate the potential diagnostic pitfalls of using frozen sections. METHODS AND RESULTS: We reviewed retrospectively 59 cases of sclerosing pneumocytoma that underwent an intraoperative frozen section examination. All original frozen section slides and permanent section slides were reviewed. The rate of accurate diagnosis using frozen sections was 44.1%, the deferral rate was 15.3% and 10 cases (16.9%) were misdiagnosed as malignancy. A solid-predominant pattern is misdiagnosed more frequently than other growth patterns. We also summarised the five major diagnostic pitfalls, including hypercellularity, glandular spaces, desmoplasia-like sclerosis, cellular atypia and coagulative necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to evaluating the tumour circumscription and identifying the various growth patterns, we propose that the key to avoiding a misdiagnosis is to recognise the dual-cell populations in a tumour, i.e. cuboidal surface cells and stromal round cells.
Authors: Nishok David; Sujith Thomas Chandy; Santhosh Regini Benjamin; Aamir Mohammad; Sameer Mallampati; Thomas Alex Kodiatte; Birla Roy Gnanamuthu Journal: Indian J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg Date: 2022-01-03
Authors: Huu Y Le; Dinh Phuc Pham; Khac Tuyen Nguyen; Van Ai Hoang; The Son Trinh; Quyet Do Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) Date: 2020-06-26 Impact factor: 1.817