Intraepithelial neoplasia mimicking microinvasive squamous‐cell carcinoma in endocervical brushings
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Diagnostic Cytopathology
- Vol. 8 (1), 18-22
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dc.2840080105
Abstract
The interpretation of endocervical brush specimens requires familiarity with the various benign, atypical, dysplastic, and invasive neoplastic changes in cells located in the endocervical canal There are several pitfalls in the cytologic evaluation of brush specimens that may result in diagnostic difficulty and error. We report seven cases of high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions that were sampled by endocervical brushing and confirmed by cone biopsy or hysterectomy in which the cytologic changes in the Papanicolaou smears mimicked those of microinvasive sauamous-cell carcinoma. The cells in the smears were compared with those in the tissue sections to determine their sites of origin. Results of this study indicate that cells with features fulfilling the criteria for microinvasive carcinoma were found primarily in brushing smears and corresponded with the features of cells involving the endocervical glands rather than those in the surface epithelium. We conclude that the criteria that have been promulgated for the cytologic diagnosis of microinvasive squamous-cell carcinoma have limited value in the examination of endocervical brush specimens.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Radiation changes in endocervical cells in brush specimensDiagnostic Cytopathology, 1990
- The value of the cytobrush for obtaining cells from the uterine cervixDiagnostic Cytopathology, 1987