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Diagnostic value of urine cytology in detecting histologic variants of urothelial carcinomas in the urinary bladder: Cytopathologic correlation of 72 cases

Title
Diagnostic value of urine cytology in detecting histologic variants of urothelial carcinomas in the urinary bladder: Cytopathologic correlation of 72 cases
Authors
Yoo, YoungeunChoi, EunoLee, Dong HyeonPark, SanghuiSung, Sun Hee
Ewha Authors
성순희이동현박상희최은오
SCOPUS Author ID
성순희scopusscopus; 이동현scopusscopus; 박상희scopus; 최은오scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY
ISSN
8755-1039JCR Link

1097-0339JCR Link
Citation
DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY vol. 49, no. 3, pp. 367 - 373
Keywords
concordancehistologic varianturine cytologyurothelial carcinoma
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background Precise identification of histologic variants in urothelial carcinoma (UC) is important because some histologic types have a poor prognosis and clinical management varies. Urine cytology is used for bladder cancer screening, but the cytomorphologic features of histologic variants have not been well described. In the current study, we evaluate the effectiveness of urine cytology in detecting histologic variants of UC in the urinary bladder. Methods Seventy-two urine cytology specimens from patients diagnosed with high-grade UCs by radical cystectomy were retrospectively reviewed and correlated with histopathologic findings of subsequent radical cystectomy specimens. Results Of 72 total cases, 24 (33%) cases showed six histologic variants in corresponding surgical specimens, including squamous differentiation (13 cases), plasmacytoid variant (3 cases), micropapillary variant (3 cases), sarcomatoid variant (3 cases), giant cell variant (1 case), and glandular differentiation (1 case). Histopathology and cytomorphology were well correlated in 13 cases (54%), with squamous differentiation in 11 of 13 cases (85%), micropapillary features in 1 out of 3 cases (33%), and spindle cell/sarcomatoid features in 1 of 3 cases (33%). Furthermore, mucosal involvement by histologic variants, not amount of histologic variant, was related to high concordance rates between cytology and histology diagnosis. Conclusions The morphologic features of some histologic variants of high-grade UCs, such as squamous differentiation, micropapillary variant, and sarcomatoid variant, are partially reflected on urine cytology. In addition, mucosal involvement by histologic variants was associated with a higher detection rate of histologic variants in urine cytology.
DOI
10.1002/dc.24660
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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