Is urinary tract cytology still useful for diagnosis of bladder carcinomas? A large series of 592 bladder washings using a five-category classification of different cytological diagnoses.

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Date publication

avril 2007

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr GARBAR Christian


Tous les auteurs :
Garbar C, Mascaux C, Wespes E

Résumé

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to estimate the efficiency of a recent five-category urinary cytological classification. METHODS: A total of 592 bladder washings were fixed immediately with Saccomanno's fixative. All samples were centrifuged in a Hettich cyto-centrifuge. For each sample, the reference standard was the histology when a lesion was present at the time of cystoscopy. A five-category cytological classification was used: negative, suspicious of low (S-Lg) or high (S-Hg) grade neoplasia and consistent with low (Lg) or high (Hg) grade neoplasia. RESULTS: For cytological diagnoses of S-Lg and Lg, sensitivity was 37% and specificity was 95% for the histological diagnosis of low-grade non-invasive urothelial papillary tumour (Lg-UPT), which included papillary urothelial neoplasm of low malignant potential and low-grade urothelial carcinoma. For cytological diagnosis of S-Hg and Hg, sensitivity was 44% for high-grade non-invasive urothelial papillary carcinoma (Hg-UPC), 70% for carcinoma in situ (CIS) and 81% for invasive carcinoma (T1 and higher). Specificity was 99% in each case. Cytological diagnosis of S-Hg or Hg was not found for Lg-UPT (0/59) and no cytological diagnosis of S-Lg or Lg was found for invasive carcinoma, but was seen for Hg-UPC in 10% (3/28) and for CIS in 6% (3/50) of cases. CONCLUSION: Despite the absence of international consensus, the recent five-category cytological classification for urine is accurate for current urological practice.

Référence

Cytopathology. 2007 Apr;18(2):79-83.