AI Article Synopsis

  • Fine-Needle Aspiration Cytology (FNAC) is recognized as a key minimally invasive method for diagnosing lung cancer, yet the preparation of cell blocks (CBs) often falls short due to low cellularity.
  • The study aimed to enhance specimen acquisition and CB preparation during CT-guided FNACs, focusing on improving cellularity and overall sample quality in a resource-limited environment.
  • Results showed that 90.1% of the CBs achieved acceptable cellularity, with preserved morphology and architecture, indicating the effectiveness of the new preparation technique.

Article Abstract

Background: Being a minimally invasive diagnostic technique, Fine-Needle Aspiration Cytology (FNAC) has become the first-line test and corresponding aspirated material has become the target specimen for diagnosis and ancillary tests in lung carcinoma. Although the role of Cell Blocks (CBs) in diagnosis and in ancillary testing is well recognized in literature, limited attention has been paid to specimen procurement and triage in the preparation of CBs. In the present scenario, CBs are not consistently optimal because of its low cellularity.

Aims: This study is aimed to describe an improvised technique of specimen acquisition and cell block preparation in CT-guided FNACs of lung carcinoma cases in a resource-constrained center and to assess its efficacy for optimal representation of cellularity, morphology, and architecture.

Materials And Methods: Total 85 lung carcinoma cases undergoing CT-guided FNAC in our center from February 2017 to January 2018 were included in this study. 4 to 5 direct smears and subsequent CBs were made from material obtained by single pass. Cellularity of smears and corresponding cell blocks were assessed and categorized according to a scoring system (score 1 to 3 for number of cells <50, 50-100, >100, respectively). Preserved architecture and morphology were also assessed in smears and CBs.

Results: The evaluated samples showed a cellularity score 3 in 65.4%CBs and score 2 in 24.7% CBs. Overall, 90.1% cell blocks had acceptable cellularity. Cell morphology was preserved in all CBs of acceptable cellularity, except for two adenocarcinoma, one squamous cell carcinoma, and one small cell carcinoma blocks. Cellular architecture was also preserved in all CBs of acceptable cellularity.

Conclusions: This simple improvised technique of CB preparation optimized its cellularity, morphology, and architectural preservation, even after adequate cellular FNA smears.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7315915PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/JOC.JOC_138_18DOI Listing

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