TY - JOUR
T1 - Cytologic grading of primary malignant salivary gland tumors
T2 - A blinded review by an international panel
AU - Johnson, Daniel N.
AU - Onenerk, Mine
AU - Krane, Jeffrey F.
AU - Rossi, Esther Diana
AU - Baloch, Zubair
AU - Barkan, Güliz
AU - Bongiovanni, Massimo
AU - Callegari, Fabiano
AU - Canberk, Sule
AU - Dixon, Glen
AU - Field, Andrew
AU - Griffith, Christopher C.
AU - Jhala, Nirag
AU - Jiang, Sara
AU - Kurtycz, Daniel
AU - Layfield, Lester
AU - Lin, Oscar
AU - Maleki, Zahra
AU - Perez-Machado, Miguel
AU - Pusztaszeri, Marc
AU - Vielh, Philippe
AU - Wang, He
AU - Zarka, Matthew A.
AU - Faquin, William C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Cancer Society
PY - 2020/6/1
Y1 - 2020/6/1
N2 - Background: Fine needle aspiration (FNA) is commonly used for the preoperative evaluation of salivary gland tumors. Tumor grade is a key factor influencing clinical management of salivary gland carcinomas (SGCs). To assess the ability to grade nonbasaloid SGCs in FNA specimens, an international panel of cytopathologists convened to review and score SGC cases. Methods: The study cohort included 61 cases of primary SGC from the pathology archives of 3 tertiary medical centers. Cases from 2005 to 2016 were selected, scanned, and digitized. Nineteen cytopathologists blinded to the histologic diagnosis reviewed the digitized cytology slides and graded them as low, high, or indeterminate. The panelists' results were then compared to the tumor grades based on histopathologic examination of the corresponding resection specimens. Results: All but 2 of the 19 (89.5%) expert panelists review more than 20 salivary gland FNAs per year; 16 (84.2%) of the panelists work at academic medical centers, and 13 (68.4%) have more than 10 years' experience. Participants had an overall accuracy of 89.4% in the grading of SGC cases, with 90.2% and 88.3% for low- and high-grade SGC, respectively. Acinic cell carcinoma and mucoepidermoid carcinoma had the highest degree of accuracy, while epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma and salivary duct carcinoma had the lowest degree of accuracy. As expected, the intermediate-grade SGC cases showed the greatest variability (high-grade, 42.1%; low-grade, 37.5%, indeterminate, 20.4%). Conclusion: This study confirms the high accuracy of cytomorphologic grading of primary SGC by FNA as low- or high-grade. However, caution should be exercised when a grade cannot be confidently assigned.
AB - Background: Fine needle aspiration (FNA) is commonly used for the preoperative evaluation of salivary gland tumors. Tumor grade is a key factor influencing clinical management of salivary gland carcinomas (SGCs). To assess the ability to grade nonbasaloid SGCs in FNA specimens, an international panel of cytopathologists convened to review and score SGC cases. Methods: The study cohort included 61 cases of primary SGC from the pathology archives of 3 tertiary medical centers. Cases from 2005 to 2016 were selected, scanned, and digitized. Nineteen cytopathologists blinded to the histologic diagnosis reviewed the digitized cytology slides and graded them as low, high, or indeterminate. The panelists' results were then compared to the tumor grades based on histopathologic examination of the corresponding resection specimens. Results: All but 2 of the 19 (89.5%) expert panelists review more than 20 salivary gland FNAs per year; 16 (84.2%) of the panelists work at academic medical centers, and 13 (68.4%) have more than 10 years' experience. Participants had an overall accuracy of 89.4% in the grading of SGC cases, with 90.2% and 88.3% for low- and high-grade SGC, respectively. Acinic cell carcinoma and mucoepidermoid carcinoma had the highest degree of accuracy, while epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma and salivary duct carcinoma had the lowest degree of accuracy. As expected, the intermediate-grade SGC cases showed the greatest variability (high-grade, 42.1%; low-grade, 37.5%, indeterminate, 20.4%). Conclusion: This study confirms the high accuracy of cytomorphologic grading of primary SGC by FNA as low- or high-grade. However, caution should be exercised when a grade cannot be confidently assigned.
KW - FNA
KW - Milan system
KW - cancer
KW - cytology
KW - grading
KW - salivary gland
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U2 - 10.1002/cncy.22271
DO - 10.1002/cncy.22271
M3 - Article
C2 - 32267606
AN - SCOPUS:85083044090
SN - 1934-662X
VL - 128
SP - 392
EP - 402
JO - Cancer Cytopathology
JF - Cancer Cytopathology
IS - 6
ER -