Objective: The purpose of this study was to describe the imaging findings in 149 patients with pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) who had undergone at least 4 years of clinical follow-up for detection of subsequent malignancy.
Conclusion: PASH is a common entity that presents with benign imaging features without evidence of subsequent malignant potential. At our institution, in the absence of suspicious features a diagnosis of PASH at core biopsy is considered sufficient, and surgical excision has been obviated.
Background: Voided urine cytology continues to play a paramount role in the surveillance of transitional cell neoplasms and as a screening modality in certain high-risk situations. Although a significant number of samples are diagnosed as atypical, there is little known about the outcome of these patients. In addition, the significance of transitional cell fragments in voided urine samples is uncertain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreast fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) has been increasingly accepted as an important triage tool for the evaluation of breast lumps. We examined the clinical utility and diagnostic accuracy of a negative breast FNAB result by studying 450 breast aspirates in 413 patients (average age 45 years) with a "negative" or benign cytologic interpretation performed at Massachusetts General Hospital over a 4-year period. Of these patients, 121 (29%) underwent subsequent biopsy and 17 (4%) were found to have malignancy (3% of total negative FNABs; 14% with histology).
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