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1.
Acta Cytol ; : 1-8, 2024 Jun 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38952122

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Extrauterine malignancies in cervical samples are rarely seen. It is important to differentiate these cells from those of primary uterine malignancies to determine appropriate line of further investigations and management. Literature on these lesions is limited largely restricted to case reports. The aim of the present study was to study the spectrum and cytomorphological features of extrauterine malignancies in cervical Pap smears. MATERIALS AND METHODS: It is a retrospective and descriptive study conducted in Department of Cytopathology from January 2019 to July 2023. All cases of extrauterine malignancies with available cytology material were included in this study. All cases of primary uterine malignancies, i.e., uterine corpus or cervix confirmed by clinical, radiological, and histopathological examination were excluded. RESULTS: 104 out of 11,674 cytology Pap smears were those of extrauterine malignancy. Diagnosis of extrauterine malignancy was given in 47.1% cases, 30.9% were reported as positive for malignancy without giving the possibility of an extrauterine origin, and 22.0% were reported as atypical glandular cells only. In 56 cases where Pap smear was the first investigation which led to the diagnosis. Most common extrauterine malignancy was adenocarcinoma principally from ovarian, colorectal, and vaginal origin. Other epithelial malignancies noted were urothelial carcinoma and invasive breast carcinoma. Among non-epithelial malignancies, we reported vaginal mucosal melanoma, cutaneous melanoma, acute leukaemia, and anaplastic large cell lymphoma. CONCLUSION: High index of suspicion, presence of squamous and glandular elements with no atypical features, and occasional clusters of cells with marked atypia and usually no necrosis in the background are helpful cytomorphological clues to raise suspicion for extrauterine malignancy. Correlation with serology, radiology, and immunocytochemistry can help in reaching final diagnosis.

2.
J Cytol ; 37(4): 159-165, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33776254

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Metastasis to the breast of an extra-mammary origin is very rare. FNAC plays an important role in differentiating non-mammary breast metastasis from primary malignancy. This study aimed to analyze the cytomorphological criteria and its pitfalls in differentiating metastatic lesion of the breast from primary malignancy. METHODOLOGY: Retrospective analysis of 891 FNACs of the breast was performed for a time span of 3 years. A total of 12 cases were diagnosed on FNAC as secondary neoplasms to the breast. Clinical and radiological data, along with Pap and MGG stained smears of each case were examined and correlated with the histopathology of the primary tumor. Statistical analysis was carried out. All cases of primary breast malignancies were excluded from our study. RESULTS: In 10 out of 12 cases, primary malignancies were identified as Plasma cell myeloma (one case), B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (two cases), acute myeloid leukemia (one case); chronic myeloid leukemia (one case), Burkitt's lymphoma of the ovary (one case), Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (one case), esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (one case), spindle cell sarcoma (one case) and squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix (one case). The remaining two cases in our study were misdiagnosed on cytology as metastasis and turned out to be breast primaries on histopathology. CONCLUSION: Our case series highlights the importance of FNAC to differentiate secondary lesions from primary breast malignancy and thus helps to avoid unnecessary surgery to the patient. It emphasizes on the need to keep in mind the possibility of metastatic breast neoplasms in the presence of unusual cytological features on FNAC.

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