Seethala Raja R, LiVolsi Virginia A, Baloch Zubair W
Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, 6 Founders Pavilion, 3400 Spruce Street, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Head Neck. 2005 Mar;27(3):217-23. doi: 10.1002/hed.20142.
Both fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and frozen section (FS), although useful in preoperative and intraoperative management, have their advantages and pitfalls when used in the diagnosis of salivary gland lesions. The accuracy of each of these modalities has been assessed separately in many studies; a direct comparison of these techniques on a large cohort has not been well studied. Herein, we determine the relative accuracies of both FNA and FS in the diagnosis of salivary gland lesions.
We reviewed a cohort of 220 cases of parotid gland FNA with histologic follow-up; FS was performed in 57 cases (26%). The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of FNA and FS were determined with respect to the final histologic diagnosis. For these calculations, benign diagnosis was considered negative, whereas a malignant diagnosis was considered positive. In addition, we re-reviewed the FNA and FS slides in cases that had conflicting FNA and FS results.
Of the 220 cases examined, the FNA diagnoses were as follows: benign (n = 142), malignant (n = 52), indeterminate (n = 14), and nondiagnostic (n = 12). Correlating these findings with the histologic findings, nine cases (4%) were false negative, whereas 12 (5%) were false positive. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for FNA when diagnostic were 86%, 92%, and 90%, respectively. In 57 cases with FS, seven (12%) were false negative, whereas none were false positive. The FS was able to change to benign four diagnoses that were malignant by FNA and provide a diagnosis for five nondiagnostic FNAs. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for FS were 77%, 100%, and 88%, respectively. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for FNA and FS combined were 90%, 100%, and 95%, respectively.
Both FNA and FS provide a similar accuracy. FS may be useful if FNA is nondiagnostic and may also be useful in confirming or refuting malignancy in some cases. Hence, both techniques are complementary to each other in the diagnosis of salivary gland lesions.
细针穿刺抽吸活检(FNA)和冰冻切片检查(FS)虽对术前和术中管理有用,但用于诊断涎腺病变时都有其优点和缺陷。许多研究已分别评估了这两种方法的准确性;尚未对大量病例队列中这两种技术进行直接比较研究。在此,我们确定FNA和FS在诊断涎腺病变中的相对准确性。
我们回顾了一组220例腮腺FNA病例并进行了组织学随访;57例(26%)进行了FS检查。根据最终组织学诊断确定FNA和FS的敏感性、特异性和准确性。对于这些计算,良性诊断视为阴性,而恶性诊断视为阳性。此外,我们重新检查了FNA和FS结果相互矛盾的病例的FNA和FS切片。
在检查的220例病例中,FNA诊断结果如下:良性(n = 142)、恶性(n = 52)、不确定(n = 14)和无法诊断(n = 12)。将这些结果与组织学结果相关联,9例(4%)为假阴性,而12例(5%)为假阳性。FNA诊断性结果的敏感性、特异性和准确性分别为86%、92%和90%。在57例进行FS检查的病例中,7例(12%)为假阴性,而无假阳性。FS能够将4例FNA诊断为恶性的病例改为良性诊断,并为5例无法诊断的FNA提供诊断。FS的敏感性、特异性和准确性分别为77%、100%和88%。FNA和FS联合的敏感性、特异性和准确性分别为90%、100%和95%。
FNA和FS具有相似的准确性。如果FNA无法诊断,FS可能有用,并且在某些情况下对确认或排除恶性肿瘤也可能有用。因此,这两种技术在涎腺病变诊断中相互补充。