The College of American Pathologists (CAP) surveys provide national benchmarks of pathology practice.
To investigate pancreaticobiliary cytology practice in domestic and international laboratories in ...2021.
We analyzed data from the CAP Pancreaticobiliary Cytology Practice Supplemental Questionnaire that was distributed to laboratories participating in the 2021 CAP Nongynecologic Cytopathology Education Program.
Ninety-three percent (567 of 612) of respondent laboratories routinely evaluated pancreaticobiliary cytology specimens. Biliary brushing (85%) was the most common pancreaticobiliary cytology specimen evaluated, followed by pancreatic fine-needle aspiration (79%). The most used sampling methods reported by 235 laboratories were 22-gauge needle for fine-needle aspiration (62%) and SharkCore needle for fine-needle biopsy (27%). Cell block was the most used slide preparation method (76%), followed by liquid-based cytology (59%) for pancreatic cystic lesions. Up to 95% (303 of 320) of laboratories performed rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) on pancreatic solid lesions, while 56% (180 of 320) performed ROSE for cystic lesions. Thirty-six percent (193 of 530) of laboratories used the Papanicolaou Society of Cytopathology System for Reporting Pancreaticobiliary Cytology in 2021. Among all institution types, significant differences in specimen volume, specimen type, ROSE practice, and case sign-out were identified. Additionally, significant differences in specimen type, slide preparation, and ROSE practice were found.
This is the first survey from the CAP to investigate pancreaticobiliary cytology practice. The findings reveal significant differences among institution types and between domestic and international laboratories. These data provide a baseline for future studies in a variety of practice settings.
Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) uptake on positron emission tomography (PET) scan is an indicator of potential malignancy or infection. Patients with a history of talc pleurodesis can develop pleural or ...lung parenchymal nodules/talcomas. In these patients, talc-associated (non-malignancy-related) FDG uptake may occur over years.
A 66-year-old female presented with a past medical history significant for resected non-small-cell lung cancer and was treated with chemotherapy/radiation. The referring physician indicated that she subsequently developed benign pleural effusions and had talc pleurodesis to limit recurrence. The patient was referred to our institution for endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial fine-needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) due to a new left upper lobe nodule with increasing FDG uptake on follow-up interval PET performed at the referring institution. On-site cytologic evaluation showed no evidence of malignancy, but found refractile foreign material, consistent with the presence of talc particles.
This case presents the importance of cytologic recognition of talc particles during on-site evaluation and discusses the phenomenon of increasing PET-FDG uptake associated with talc pleurodesis.
Tumor-associated lymphoid proliferation (TALP) is a well-recognized lymphocytic reaction that is commonly associated with certain salivary gland tumors. A salivary carcinoma with TALP may be confused ...for true lymph node involvement by that tumor, constituting a potential pitfall in tumor staging that may result in unnecessary therapeutic intervention or erroneous prognostication for patients. True lymph nodes harbor populations of extrafollicular reticulum cells (ERCs), which can be highlighted by low molecular weight cytokeratin immunohistochemistry. We sought to determine whether low molecular weight cytokeratin Cam5.2 immunostaining may be utilized to differentiate true lymph node involvement by salivary gland tumors from TALP. The surgical pathology archives of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center was searched for cases of salivary gland neoplasms exhibiting either TALP or true lymph node involvement. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections were examined. Cases were classified on the basis of a definitive lymph node capsule and subcapsular sinus, as seen on routine histologic evaluation. Low molecular weight cytokeratin Cam5.2 immunostaining was performed and evaluated on all cases. Twenty-three salivary gland carcinomas with TALP and 16 carcinomas involving a lymph node (14 carcinomas metastatic to regional lymph nodes and 2 carcinomas arising from benign lymph node inclusions) were identified. Numerous Cam5.2-positive ERCs were identified within the nodal tissue of all true lymph nodes involved by carcinoma (16 of 16 cases), while Cam5.2-positive ERCs were completely absent in all cases of salivary gland lesions with TALP (0 of 23 cases) (100% vs. 0%, p < .0001, Fisher’s Exact). Utilization of low molecular weight cytokeratin Cam 5.2 immunostaining for ERCs is a highly useful tool for distinguishing true lymph node involvement by salivary gland carcinomas from TALP. This strategy may be useful in identifying genuine nodal metastasis in histologically ambiguous cases, and to avoid erroneously upstaging tumor with TALP as nodal metastasis with the resulting prognostic and therapeutic implications. Moreover, low molecular weight cytokeratin immunostaining may be useful in confirming the rare examples of salivary gland tumors arising from intranodal salivary gland inclusions.
Purpose
Lung nodules are a common radiographic finding. Non-surgical biopsy is recommended in patients with moderate or high pretest probability for malignancy. Shape-sensing robotic-assisted ...bronchoscopy (ssRAB) combined with radial endobronchial ultrasound (r-EBUS) and cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) is a new approach to sample pulmonary lesions. Limited data are available regarding the diagnostic accuracy of combined ssRAB with r-EBUS and CBCT.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective analysis of the first 200 biopsy procedures of 209 lung lesions using ssRAB, r-EBUS, and CBCT at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. Outcomes were based on pathology interpretations of samples taken during ssRAB, clinical and radiographic follow-up, and/or additional sampling.
Results
The mean largest lesion dimension was 22.6 ± 13.3 mm with a median of 19 mm (range 7 to 73 mm). The prevalence of malignancy in our data was 64.1%. The diagnostic accuracy of ssRAB combined with advanced imaging was 91.4% (CI 86.7–94.8%). Sensitivity was 87.3% (CI 80.5–92.4%) with a specificity of 98.7% (CI 92.8–100%). The negative and positive predictive values were 81.3% and 99.2%. The rate of non-diagnostic sampling was 11% (23/209 samples). The only complication was pneumothorax in 1% (2/200 procedures), with 0.5% requiring a chest tube.
Conclusion
Our results of the combined use of ssRAB with r-EBUS and CBCT to sample pulmonary lesions suggest a high diagnostic accuracy for malignant lesions with reasonably high sensitivity and negative predictive values. The procedure is safe with a low rate of complications.
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PanNETs) are a heterogeneous population of neoplasms that arise from hormone-secreting islet cells of the pancreas and have increased markedly in incidence over the ...past four decades. Non-functional PanNETs, which occur more frequently than hormone-secreting tumors, are often not diagnosed until later stages of tumor development and have poorer prognoses. Development of successful therapeutics for PanNETs has been slow, partially due to a lack of diverse animal models for pre-clinical testing. Here, we report development of an inducible, conditional mouse model of PanNETs by using a bi-transgenic system for regulated expression of the aberrant activator of Cdk5, p25, specifically in β-islet cells. This model produces a heterogeneous population of PanNETs that includes a subgroup of well-differentiated, non-functional tumors. Production of these tumors demonstrates the causative potential of aberrantly active Cdk5 for generation of PanNETs. Further, we show that human PanNETs express Cdk5 pathway components, are dependent on Cdk5 for growth, and share genetic and transcriptional overlap with the INS-p25OE model. The utility of this model is enhanced by the ability to form tumor-derived allografts. This new model of PanNETs will facilitate molecular delineation of Cdk5-dependent PanNETs and the development of new targeted therapeutics.
Sensitive and specific assays for human papillomavirus (HPV) are essential for patient management. In this study, we directly compared the efficacy of the Hybrid Capture 2 (HC2; Qiagen, Valencia, CA) ...and Cervista assays (Hologic, Madison, WI). Consecutive cervical cytology specimens (n = 601) were tested using HC2, Cervista HR, and Cervista HPV 16/18 with analysis of only cytology-negative cases (n = 533). Results indicated no significant difference (P = .458) in prevalence rates between HC2 (7.5%) and Cervista HR (8.5%). The Cervista 16/18 prevalence was 1.6%. The negative percentage of agreement was 95.1% (468/492) vs a 70% (28/40) positive percentage of agreement. No false-negative results were detected by the Cervista internal DNA control. Our data show 29 discordant positive results (12 HC2 and 17 Cervista HR), suggesting some women with negative cytology may be triaged for unnecessary follow-up with either assay. For clinical screening, Cervista HR and HC2 are comparable and, by extension, should provide excellent negative predictive value for histologically relevant disease.