In this study, the CRS showed independent prognostic significance for PFS but not for OS.
BACKGROUND:Intraoperative pathological assessment is frequently requested in patients with suspected ovarian neoplasia so that optimal surgical management can be performed. In this study the accuracy of intraoperative cytology has been assessed and the results compared with frozen section diagnosis.METHODS:The study comprised 402 ovarian tumors that were submitted for intraoperative assessment in which both cytology preparations, usually scrape smears, and conventional frozen sections were examined. Each technique was evaluated independently, although the diagnosis transmitted to the surgeon was based upon the combination of the clinical, macroscopic, histological, and cytological information. The results were compared with the final pathological diagnosis in each case and cases with discordant diagnoses were reviewed.RESULTS:There were 226 benign lesions, 35 borderline epithelial neoplasms, and 141 malignant tumors according to the final pathological diagnosis. All benign lesions were accurately categorized using both frozen section and cytology. Thirty (86%) of the borderline tumors and 137 (97%) of the malignant tumors were accurately identified on frozen section, whereas the corresponding results for cytology were 23 (66%) and 131 (93%), respectively. There were no false‐positive diagnoses with either technique and the overall accuracy was 97.8%. Cytological evaluation provided better morphologic detail, permitted wider tumor sampling, and directed appropriate ancillary investigations in some cases.CONCLUSIONS:Overall, frozen section was more accurate than smear preparations in this series. However, cytology has a complementary role in the intraoperative assessment of ovarian neoplasia and provides a more specific diagnosis in some cases. Cancer (Cancer Cytopathol) 2010. © 2010 American Cancer Society.
PurposeParaneoplastic retinopathy can be the first manifestation of systemic malignancy. A subset of paraneoplastic retinopathy is characterized by negative-type electroretinography (ERG) without fundus abnormality. Here we describe the multimodal imaging and clinico-pathological correlation of a unique case of acute progressive paravascular placoid neuroretinopathy with suspected retinal depolarizing bipolar cell dysfunction preceding the diagnosis of metastatic small cell carcinoma of the prostate.MethodsERG was performed according to the International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision standards. Imaging modalities included near-infrared reflectance, blue-light autofluorescence, fluorescein and indocyanine green angiographies, spectral domain optical coherence tomography, ultra-widefield colour and green-light autofluorescence imaging, microperimetry and adaptive optics imaging. Patient serum was screened for anti-retinal antibodies using western blotting. Immunostaining and histological analyses were performed on sections from human retinal tissues and a patient prostate biopsy.ResultsSerial multimodal retinal imaging, microperimetry and adaptive optics photography demonstrated a paravascular distribution of placoid lesions characterized by hyper-reflectivity within the outer nuclear layer resembling type 2 acute macular neuroretinopathy. There was no visible lesion within the inner nuclear layer despite electronegative-type ERG. Six months later, the patient presented with metastatic small cell carcinoma of the prostate. Tumour cells were immunopositive for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, enolase and recoverin as well as neuroendocrine markers. The patient’s serum reacted to cytoplasmic and nuclear antigens in the prostate biopsy and in human retina. Anti-retinal antibodies against several antigens were detected by both commercial and in-house western blots.ConclusionsA spectrum of autoreactive anti-retinal antibodies is associated with a unique phenotype of acute progressive paravascular placoid neuroretinopathy resulting in degeneration of photoreceptor cells, inner retinal dysfunction and classic electronegative ERG in paraneoplastic retinopathy. Detailed clinical, functional and immunological phenotyping of paraneoplastic retinopathy illustrated the complex mechanism of paraneoplastic syndrome.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10633-017-9587-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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