Histiocytes and the detection of endometrial adenocarcinoma
- PMID: 3859129
Histiocytes and the detection of endometrial adenocarcinoma
Abstract
Histiocytes have long been recognized as part of the milieu of endometrial carcinoma in gynecologic smears. In an effort to determine whether a quantitative assessment of histiocytes, especially in the absence of endometrial cells, could increase the effectiveness of the cervicovaginal smear for diagnosis of endometrial carcinoma, smears obtained prior to a tissue diagnosis of endometrial adenocarcinoma were evaluated from 44 postmenopausal women. Smears from 97 age-matched patients in the same clinic were also evaluated and used as a control group for the endometrial carcinoma patients. All smears were evaluated for the presence of histiocytes and for the presence of benign or malignant endometrial cells, with the histiocytes quantitated as minimal (less than 5 per high-power field [HPF]), moderate (5 to 10/HPF) or heavy (greater than 10/HPF). Sensitivity and specificity were calculated to assess the role of histiocytes in the presence and in the absence of endometrial cells using cytologic findings. Our data indicate that the presence of moderate or heavy numbers of histiocytes on cervicovaginal smears of postmenopausal women increased the cytologic sensitivity from 61% to 82% when considered a marker of disease along with endometrial cells. These results suggest that attention to the presence of histiocytes on cervicovaginal smears may increase the utility of cytology for the diagnosis of endometrial lesions and may be a useful guideline for the cancer-related gynecologic examination.
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