| Literature DB >> 35673693 |
Sandhya V Poflee1, Jasvinder Kaur Bhatia2.
Abstract
The different treatment options for carcinoma cervix include radiation, chemotherapy, and surgical treatments. Cytological analysis of smears is crucial for patient follow-up to determine response to therapy and to diagnose the persistence or recurrence of malignancy. Anatomical alterations and changes in cell morphology following radiation or chemotherapy make collecting and interpreting cervical cytology samples difficult. These issues can be mitigated by liquid-based cytology. Ionizing radiation is used in radiotherapy (RT) to kill cells. It is important that cytologists are aware of alterations in morphology of the cells. Radiation can cause cytoplasmic and nuclear changes. Cellular enlargement, vacuolation, granularity loss, and other changes linked with cell death are examples of cytoplasmic alterations. Nuclear enlargement and multinucleation are the most frequent nuclear alterations. These changes are determined by the amount of time that has passed since radiation. It should be emphasized that no one characteristic is pathognomonic. Post-irradiation dysplasia is a condition described as abnormal cellular changes in non-neoplastic epithelial cells after RT. Chemotherapy causes comparable alterations as radiation but impacts fewer cells. Busulfan and other chemotherapeutic treatments may produce morphological alterations, which cytologists must be aware of and able to identify. Immunosuppressive treatments, hormonal therapy, and tamoxifen are some of the other drugs that might cause changes in cervical morphology. Surgical methods used in the detection and treatment of cervical cancer may potentially cause alterations as a result of thermal damage and healing. For the treatment of cervical lesions, electrocautery and the loop electrosurgical excisional procedure are available. These procedures employ electric current ablation leading to ischemic changes in the cervical smear. Cytological analysis of smears following treatment with these modalities necessitates a comprehensive history, kind of therapy, and duration of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical Smear; Cytology; Pap smear; Radiation; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
Year: 2022 PMID: 35673693 PMCID: PMC9168396 DOI: 10.25259/CMAS_03_12_2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytojournal ISSN: 1742-6413 Impact factor: 2.345
Staging of carcinoma cervix.
| Stage | Description |
|---|---|
| I | The carcinoma isconfinedto the cervix (extension to the uterine corpus shouldbe disregarded) |
| IA | Invasive carcinoma that canbe diagnosedonly by microscopy, with maximum depthof invasion <5 mm |
| IA1 | Measured stromal invasion <3 mm in depth |
| IA2 | Measured stromal invasion ≥3 mm and <5 mm in depth |
| IB | Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest invasion ≥5 mm (greater than Stage IA),lesionlimited to the cervix uteri |
| IB1 | Invasive carcinoma ≥5 mm depth of stromal invasion, and <2 cm in greatest dimension |
| IB2 | Invasive carcinoma ≥2 cm and <4 cm in greatest dimension |
| IB3 | Invasive carcinoma ≥4 cm in greatest dimension |
| II | The carcinoma invades beyond the uterus, but has not extended onto the lower third of the vagina or to the pelvic wall |
| IIA | Involvement limited to the upper two-thirds of the vagina without parametrial involvement |
| IIA1 | Invasive carcinoma <4 cm in greatest dimension |
| IIA2 | Invasive carcinoma ≥4 cm in greatest dimension |
| IIB | With parametrial involvement but not up to the pelvic wall |
| III | The carcinoma involves the lower third of the vagina and/or extends to the pelvic wall and/or causes hydronephrosis or non-functioning kidney and/or involves pelvic and/or para-aortic lymphnodes |
| IIIA | The carcinoma involves the lower third of the vagina, with no extension to the pelvic wall |
| IIIB | Extension to the pelvic wall and/or hydronephrosis or non-functioning kidney (unless known to be due to another cause) |
| IIIC | Involvement of pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph nodes, irrespective of tumor size and extent (with r and p notations) |
| IIIC1 | Pelvic lymph node metastasis only |
| IIIC2 | Para-aortic lymph node metastasis |
| IV | The carcinoma has extended beyond the true pelvis or has involved (biopsyproven) the mucosa of the bladder or rectum. (A bullous edema, as such, does notpermita case tobe allottedto Stage IV) |
| IVA | Spread to adjacent pelvic organs |
| IVB | Spread to distant organs |
Figure 1:(a) Conventional Pap smear and (b) liquid-based cytology (LBC) preparation showing acute radiation changes: Superficial and intermediate cells along with inflammation, necrotic debris in the background (×10). LBC smear shows a cleaner background.
Figure 5:(a and b) Conventional smear showing pus balls, that is, invasion of epithelial cells by polymorphs (a-×10, b-×40).
Figure 6:(a and b) Conventional Pap smear showing cytoplasmic vacuolation in malignant cells (a-×20, b-×40).
Figure 7:Conventional smear (a and b) showing chronic radiation changes in the form of atrophy in LBC preparation (c): Atrophic smear pattern in 45-year-old women 18 months after radiation (×10).
Figure 8:(a and b) Conventional smear from a patient with persistent carcinoma, malignant cells without radiotherapy effect (a-×10, b-×20).
Figure 9:(a and b) Conventional smear: Recurrent squamous cell carcinoma 10 months after radiation therapy in a 45-year-old woman (×10).
Figure 10:LBC preparation: Cells showing post-radiation dysplasia in the lower half of the field.
Figure 11:Conventional smear: Granular background and disintegrating squamous and glandular cells showing features of ischemia after cautery (×10).