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Title: The "suspicious" gynecologic smear. Author: Schneider A, Kraus H. Journal: Acta Cytol; 1985; 29(5):795-9. PubMed ID: 3863426. Abstract: "Suspicious" gynecologic smears from 842 patients over a seven-year period were analyzed for their causes and outcomes. The frequency of the cytologic diagnosis of "suspicious" ranged between 0.5% in 1979 and 1.44% in 1975 of all smears examined. Review of the smears showed that this classification was used to report a variety of conditions, including equivocal possible precancerous changes as well as the presence of severe inflammation, degenerative or atrophic changes, abnormal glandular cells and metaplasia. The cytologic follow-up, following anti-inflammatory or hormonal therapy, showed a conversion to negative findings in 65.1% of all cases, usually within 12 months. In 294 cases, histologic analysis became necessary, revealing precancerous changes or cancer in 147 patients (17.5% of the study group). Smears of postmenopausal women with suspicious glandular or endometrial cells received special analysis. Significant numbers of such cases had histologic findings positive for malignancy (20% of smears with glandular cells and 21.3% with endometrial cells), as did also smears showing post-irradiative changes (34.6%) or atrophic and degenerative changes (17.1%). Therefore, "suspicious" smears in these groups were considered to indicate an increased risk of malignancy. A regimen for the proper management of cases with "suspicious" smears has been established.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]