| Literature DB >> 35928528 |
Roopa Hariprasad1, Srabani Mittal2, Partha Basu3.
Abstract
Cytology identifies the women who are at higher risk of harboring high-grade cervical premalignant lesions or invasive cancer. However, a diagnostic test such as colposcopy is crucial for women with abnormal cytology for localization of the abnormality, confirmation of diagnosis, and appropriate management. To standardize this subjective technique and to minimize the interobserver variations, Swede scoring system was introduced. The revised colposcopic nomenclature of the International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy in 2011 included various normal and abnormal colposcopic findings and gives a description of colposcopic features which improves its accuracy over the colposcopic indices. There is consensus agreement that cytology indicative of high-grade lesions (ASC-H and HSIL in the Bethesda system) should engender immediate referral for colposcopy and biopsy. The management of women who have equivocal or borderline cytology of low-grade abnormalities (ASCUS/LSIL) is still under deliberation. It is generally agreed to have an HPV triage for women with equivocal cytology. Based on the latest recommendations, the current chapter provides an extensive overview of the role of colposcopy in the management of women with various abnormalities reported on Pap smear.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical cancer; Cervical cytology; Colposcopy; Precancerous lesions
Year: 2022 PMID: 35928528 PMCID: PMC9345135 DOI: 10.25259/CMAS_03_15_2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytojournal ISSN: 1742-6413 Impact factor: 2.345
IFCPC 2011 nomenclature.
| General assessment | • Adequate/inadequate for the reason… (i.e.: cervix obscured by inflammation, bleeding, and scar) | |||
| Normal colposcopic findings | Original squamous epithelium: | |||
| Abnormal colposcopic findings | General principle | Location of the lesion: Inside or outside the T-zone | ||
| Grade 1 (Minor) | Thin AW epithelium | Fine mosaic | ||
| Grade 2 (Major) | Dense acetowhite epithelium | Coarse mosaic | ||
| Non specific | Leukoplakia (keratosis, hyperkeratosis), erosion | |||
| Suspicious for invasion | Atypical vessels | |||
| Miscellaneous finding | Congenital transformation zone | Stenosis | ||
Swede score.
| Swede scores | 0 | 1 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aceto uptake | Zero or transparent | Thin, milky | Distinct, stearin-like |
| Margin and surface | Zero or diffuse | Sharp but irregular, jagged, geographical, satellites | Sharp and even, difference in surface levels including “cuffing” |
| Vessels | Fine, regular | Absent | Coarse or atypical vessels |
| Lesion size | <5 mm | 5–15 mm or spanning 2 quadrants | >15 mm or spanning 3–4 quadrants or endocervically undefined |
| Iodine staining | Brown | Faintly or patchy yellow | Distinct yellow |
Salient features of various lesions detected on colposcopy.
| Lesion type | Salient features | Colposcopy image |
|---|---|---|
| Leukoplakia | • White patch with shiny, waxy surface |
|
| Condyloma | • Single or multiple bright white distinct, irregular lesions |
|
| Condyloma/subclinical papillomavirus infection (SPI) | • Thin/milky acetowhite patches |
|
| Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion | • Thin acetowhite epithelium |
|
| High-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion | • Dense acetowhite epithelium |
|
| Invasive carcinoma | • Dense acetowhite area with/without erosion |
|
| Adenocarcinoma | • Multiple dense acetowhite areas on columnar epithelium (grated coconut appearance) |
|