TY - JOUR
T1 - Adequacy in voided urine cytology specimens
T2 - The role of volume and a repeat void upon predictive values for high-grade urothelial carcinoma
AU - Vandenbussche, Christopher J.
AU - Rosenthal, Dorothy L.
AU - Olson, Matthew T.
PY - 2016/3/1
Y1 - 2016/3/1
N2 - BACKGROUND Adequacy assessment is one of the most controversial and overlooked components in the daily practice of cytopathology, because it is generally determined from limited samples. Because voided urine varies widely in terms of its volume and cellularity, there is little consensus about the proper role for these variables in assessing specimen adequacy. In this study, the authors explored the role of volume in voided urine specimens to determine whether it plays a role in determining adequacy for the detection of high-grade urothelial carcinoma. METHODS Voided urine specimens received at the authors' laboratory over the 9.5 years since the introduction of the Johns Hopkins Template for Reporting Urinary Cytopathology were analyzed for correlations between volume, specimen adequacy, and the diagnosis of high-grade malignancy. The same data set also was queried to determine whether a patient who provided a voided low-volume specimen could yield a higher volume specimen and thereby increase adequacy. RESULTS In total, 15,731 voided urine specimens with a cumulative volume of 891 liters originating from 8594 individual patients were analyzed. Specimen adequacy increased linearly for each increment of volume submitted to the laboratory up to 30 mL, after which the correlation was nonlinear. Low-volume specimens below this cutoff also had lower fractions of specimens that were diagnosed as malignant or suspicious. CONCLUSIONS Volume is an important component in the evaluation of adequacy for voided urine cytology specimens.
AB - BACKGROUND Adequacy assessment is one of the most controversial and overlooked components in the daily practice of cytopathology, because it is generally determined from limited samples. Because voided urine varies widely in terms of its volume and cellularity, there is little consensus about the proper role for these variables in assessing specimen adequacy. In this study, the authors explored the role of volume in voided urine specimens to determine whether it plays a role in determining adequacy for the detection of high-grade urothelial carcinoma. METHODS Voided urine specimens received at the authors' laboratory over the 9.5 years since the introduction of the Johns Hopkins Template for Reporting Urinary Cytopathology were analyzed for correlations between volume, specimen adequacy, and the diagnosis of high-grade malignancy. The same data set also was queried to determine whether a patient who provided a voided low-volume specimen could yield a higher volume specimen and thereby increase adequacy. RESULTS In total, 15,731 voided urine specimens with a cumulative volume of 891 liters originating from 8594 individual patients were analyzed. Specimen adequacy increased linearly for each increment of volume submitted to the laboratory up to 30 mL, after which the correlation was nonlinear. Low-volume specimens below this cutoff also had lower fractions of specimens that were diagnosed as malignant or suspicious. CONCLUSIONS Volume is an important component in the evaluation of adequacy for voided urine cytology specimens.
KW - The John Hopkins Hospital Template for Reporting Urinary Cytology
KW - The Paris System for Reporting Urinary Cytology
KW - bladder cancer
KW - urinary cytology
KW - urothelial carcinoma
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U2 - 10.1002/cncy.21634
DO - 10.1002/cncy.21634
M3 - Article
C2 - 26524350
AN - SCOPUS:84960496551
SN - 1934-662X
VL - 124
SP - 174
EP - 180
JO - Cancer Cytopathology
JF - Cancer Cytopathology
IS - 3
ER -