Objective: To assess the relationship of a cervical cytologic diagnosis based on number, size and degeneration of malignant clusters and necrotic background to cervical involvement of endometrial carcinoma.

Study Design: Cervical smears of 53 women with endometrial carcinoma were evaluated for cervical involvement. The cytologic diagnosis was compared with actual involvement, and accuracy was calculated. Retrospectively, cytologic features, including number, size and degeneration of malignant clusters and necrotic background, were analyzed in involved and noninvolved cases.

Results: Cervical involvement was confirmed in 15 patients (28.3%). The number and size of malignant clusters in the involved cases were significantly larger than those in the noninvolved cases (P < .001 and < .01, respectively). The proportion of degenerated malignant cells and necrotic background in involved cases were significantly higher than those in noninvolved cases (P < .05). Cytologic diagnosis had a sensitivity and specificity of 62.5% and 86.8%, respectively.

Conclusion: Cervical smears of involved cases revealed a large number and large size of malignant clusters. These findings support cytologic diagnosis based on number, size and degeneration of malignant cells and necrotic background. Cervical cytology is useful to exclude cervical involvement because of its high specificity and can help detect cervical involvement because of its moderately high sensitivity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000326723DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cervical involvement
24
cytologic diagnosis
16
number size
16
malignant clusters
16
necrotic background
16
size degeneration
12
degeneration malignant
12
involved cases
12
cervical
11
endometrial carcinoma
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!