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Title: Cytodiagnosis of well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma: can indeterminate diagnoses be reduced? Author: de Boer WB, Segal A, Frost FA, Sterrett GF. Journal: Cancer; 1999 Oct 25; 87(5):270-7. PubMed ID: 10536352. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Distinction of well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) from benign hepatocellular lesions is a well recognized problem in fine-needle aspiration (FNA) cytology, sometimes leading to indeterminate reports. The aim of this study was to critically examine criteria that might allow definitive diagnosis in these cases. METHODS: FNA smears and cell blocks from 65 patients with primary hepatocellular lesions were reviewed. Seventy separate samples had been obtained. The initial reports in these samples were: HCC in 34, benign findings in 27, and indeterminate findings in 9. We defined architectural and cytological features seen in the malignant cases but not seen in the benign cases, including an assessment of reticulin in cell blocks. These criteria were then applied to the indeterminate cases. RESULTS: The most specific cytologic criteria of malignancy in well differentiated HCC were (i) numerous stripped atypical nuclei, (ii) macronucleoli, (iii) increased mitoses, and (iv) multinucleation. The most specific architectural criteria in smears were (i) widened trabeculae, (ii) well defined capillaries traversing tissue fragments, and (iii) solid islands of hepatocytes rimmed by endothelial cells. The most valuable architectural criteria in cell blocks were (i) trabeculae greater than two cells thick and (ii) reduced or absent reticulin framework. Using the above criteria a retrospective diagnosis of HCC was possible in eight of the nine indeterminate cases, all but one of which have subsequently been confirmed as malignant. CONCLUSIONS: Close attention to architectural features in both smears and cell blocks should allow most well differentiated HCCs to be diagnosed by FNA cytology. A reticulin stain should be part of the routine assessment of cell blocks. Cancer (Cancer Cytopathol)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]