Fine needle aspiration biopsy. Applications in the diagnosis of lymphoproliferative diseases
- PMID: 3354761
Fine needle aspiration biopsy. Applications in the diagnosis of lymphoproliferative diseases
Abstract
A review of fine needle aspiration biopsies of lymph nodes was performed to determine accuracy and reproducibility among observers for the diagnosis of malignant lymphomas and lymphoproliferative diseases and to identify problem areas in the diagnosis of lymphomas and lymphoproliferative diseases by this biopsy method. Not including cases of carcinoma, 85% of the lymphomas and lymphoproliferative processes were correctly identified by seven of eight observations from a blind review without clinical information. Four problem areas in diagnosis from aspirates were identified: (a) distinction of lymphoid hyperplasia from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma by relying significantly on polymorphism versus monomorphism of the smear pattern; (b) separating undifferentiated carcinoma from large cell lymphoma; (c) overinterpreting extensive lymphoid polymorphism as Hodgkin's disease; and (d) diagnosing some aspirates of granulomatous lymphadenopathy, viral infection, or nodes with extensive necrosis as Hodgkin's disease. From the analysis of this series, a programmed approach was developed for diagnosing lymph node aspirates. History, physical examination, correct performance of the aspiration biopsy, and proper handling of the specimen are the four basic elements. Microscopic evaluation includes assessment of overall cellularity, pattern of cell arrangement, identification of predominant cell type, and background elements.