Thornbury J R, Burke D P, Naylor B
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1981 Apr;136(4):719-24. doi: 10.2214/ajr.136.4.719.
A correlation was made between the cytologic and the histologic diagnoses of 162 patients who underwent transthoracic fine-needle aspiration biopsy in whom histologic proof of the nature of the aspirated lesion was available. Compared to the histologic diagnosis, the specific cell-type cytologic diagnosis was usually in agreement when reported as squamous cell carcinoma (86%), adenocarcinoma (86%), or small cell anaplastic carcinoma(86%). In patients with a known extrapulmonary primary malignant neoplasm, the cytologic specimen was extremely helpful in identifying a new pulmonary lesion as metastatic rather than as a primary lesion in the lung. These results warrant the more extensive use of fine-needle aspiration biopsy in patients with pulmonary neoplasms in whom the specific cell type of the malignant neoplasm has important implications in therapy.