RESUMO
Lack of correlation between dysplastic cervicovaginal Papanicolaou (Pap) tests and subsequent cervical biopsies raises the concern that a significant squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL) may go unconfirmed. Additional tissue sections of cervical biopsies may detect SILs after noncorrelation on initial sections. Complete step sectioning of paraffin blocks was undertaken on 111 noncorrelating biopsy specimens from 95 patients and selected slides were reviewed for the presence of SIL. The initial negative biopsy slides were evaluated for four histological features: chronic cervicitis, acute cervicitis, mucosal erosion, and squamous atypia. Twenty-seven biopsies (24.3%) demonstrated the presence of a SIL in deeper levels. The presence of squamous atypia was significantly associated with the presence of dysplasia deeper in the block (P < 0.002). Acute and chronic cervicitis was seen roughly equally. Additional tissue levels are a productive way of confirming SILs, and squamous atypia allows a refined selection of negative cervical biopsies most likely to reveal an SIL on review of deeper levels.