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      Fine-needle aspiration study of cystic papillary thyroid carcinoma: Rare cytological findings

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Cystic papillary thyroid carcinoma (CPTC) is a variant of papillary carcinoma that has many mimickers in cytological grounds.

          Aim:

          To study the cytomorphologic features of CPTC and compare them to those of other cystic thyroid lesions using fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC). We also aimed to identify the cytomorphologic features that distinguish CPTC from other cystic thyroid lesions.

          Materials and Methods:

          Seventy-three cases of CPTC were included in the study. The cytomorphologic features of these cases were analyzed. The FNA smears of other thyroid lesions with cystic changes (300 colloid goiters, 290 adenomatoid nodules, 11 follicular neoplasms, and 9 hurtle cell neoplasm) were also studied.

          Results:

          The smears in CPTC revealed isolated follicular cells, small groups of cells with scalloped margins, cell swirls, small clusters with a cartwheel pattern, papillary clusters, intranuclear inclusions, nuclear grooves, sticky colloid, intracellular colloids, psammoma bodies, multinucleated giant cells, and foamy and hemosiderin laden macrophages. Small groups of cells with scalloped borders, cellular swirls, and small clusters with a cartwheel pattern were seen in CPTC, but not in other cystic lesions. Interestingly, mesothelial-like cells and hemophagocytic cells were seen in five and three cases of CPTC, respectively, but not in other cystic lesions.

          Conclusion:

          Mesothelial-like cells and hemophagocytic cells were observed in five and three cases of CPTC, respectively. Similar finding have not been previously reported in the literature.

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          Most cited references17

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          Large cystic/solid thyroid nodules: a potential false-negative fine-needle aspiration.

          False-negative fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy results of thyroid nodules are of particular concern because they imply missed malignant lesions. The purpose of this study was to identify characteristics of thyroid nodules that may lead to false-negative cytologic interpretation after FNA. We reviewed 90 consecutive patients who underwent preoperative FNA of thyroid nodules followed by thyroid surgery during a period of 27 months, including their clinical data, type and size of thyroid nodule, FNA cytology results, and final pathology report of the surgical specimen. Thyroid nodules that had the highest probability of malignancy were those that were large (3 cm or larger), cystic/solid, or large and cystic/solid. The overall false-negative rate for preoperative FNA was 11%. Large, cystic/solid, and thyroid nodules with both characteristics had false-negative rates of 17%, 25%, and 30%, respectively, compared with 0%, 9%, and 17% for small (less than 3 cm), solid, and solid nodules 3 cm or larger, respectively. Because of the high prevalence of malignancy in thyroid nodules that are large (3 cm or larger), cystic/solid, or large and cystic/solid and the high false-negative rate of FNA in diagnosing these lesions, thyroid lobectomy for diagnosis should be strongly considered in these patients even when FNA cytologic finding is interpreted as benign.
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            Fine needle aspiration of the thyroid: correlation with final histopathology in a surgical series of 797 patients.

            Fine needle aspiration (FNA) is accepted as the diagnostic procedure of choice in the management of patients with thyroid nodules. Follicular/Hürthle cell neoplasms have traditionally been grouped under the category of indeterminate FNA results. This study examined the experience with FNA in a large cohort of patients undergoing thyroidectomy before adoption of the Bethesda system for reporting thyroid cytopathology (BSTC) at a single academic medical center. A retrospective review of prospectively collected data of 797 consecutive patients with dominant nodules >1 cm who underwent FNA and thyroidectomy from 2003 to 2009 was performed. Patients were categorized into groups based on FNA results: malignant, benign, indeterminate, and nondiagnostic. The indeterminate group had FNA results that included follicular neoplasm, Hürthle cell neoplasm, and suspicion of papillary thyroid cancer. FNA results were compared with final histopathology after thyroidectomy. FNA results included 147 (18%) positive for malignancy, 255 (32%) benign, 358 (45%) indeterminate, and 37 (5%) nondiagnostic. The overall malignancy rate on final histopathology was 369 of 797 (46%). Overall, there was a false positive rate of 2% and false negative rate of 8.6%. Among the 358 indeterminate FNA results, carcinoma was found in 81 (36%) of 223 follicular neoplasms, 18 (36%) of 50 Hürthle cell neoplasms, and 78 (92%) of 85 that were suspicious for papillary thyroid cancer. When FNA was nondiagnostic, cancer was present in 9 of 37 (24%). Among 39 patients with benign FNA who had cancer on final histopathology, 22 of 255 (8.6%) had cancer in the index thyroid nodule, and 81% of cancers were >1 cm. Patients with FNA and dominant nodules >1 cm, who underwent thyroidectomy, had an overall rate of thyroid malignancy of 46%. There was a cancer prevalence of 8.6% in patients with benign FNA results referred for surgical resection. Despite not yet implementing the BSTC at this medical center, the majority of thyroidectomies were adequately performed for indeterminate FNAs with underlying malignancy. Copyright © 2011 American College of Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              "Atypical" cells in fine-needle aspiration biopsy specimens of benign thyroid cysts.

              Cystic lesions of the thyroid are common. Most are benign nodules with degenerative changes in a multinodular goiter. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) specimens from these cystic nodules usually are easily interpreted as benign. However, occasionally, cells with atypical features are encountered, increasing the possibility of a cystic malignant neoplasm. To the authors' knowledge, the microscopic features of these benign cells, presumed to be of cyst-lining origin, have not been well described to date. To refine the description of their morphologic features, with the belief that better recognition will avoid unnecessary surgery, the authors examined the cytologic and corresponding histologic features of thyroid cysts with "atypical" cells. A total of 149 FNAB specimens from thyroid cysts containing atypical cells were identified. Seventy-five specimens with subsequent histologic correlation showing a benign cystic thyroid nodule were selected for study. The cytologic features of the atypical cyst-lining cells were reviewed and correlations were made with histologic, immunohistochemical, and clinical features. In addition, 12 FNAB specimens of histologically proven cystic papillary carcinoma diagnosed as atypical were reviewed for comparison. The majority of specimens (94%) were diagnosed cytologically as atypical thyroid cysts. However, in 29% of these specimens, a papillary or Hurthle cell neoplasm could not be excluded. The cytologic features of the atypical cells most often resembled classic reparative epithelial cells consistent with a cyst-lining origin. The most common features were cohesive flat sheets (84%), distinct cell borders (96%), nuclear enlargement (92%), nuclear grooves (79%), dense granular cytoplasm (79%), small distinct nucleoli (85%), fine chromatin (87%), and elongate to spindled cytomorphology (57%). In contrast to the atypical cells from benign cysts, cystic papillary carcinomas lacked the repair-like spindled cytomorphology, and showed nuclear crowding (100%), as well as papillary microarchitecture (50%), and rare intranuclear pseudoinclusions (42%). Histologically, the atypical cells in aspirate specimens corresponded to cyst-lining cells, which exhibited a spectrum ranging from flattened elongate cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm to more polygonal cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, enlarged irregular nuclei with pale chromatin, prominent nuclear grooves, and distinct nucleoli. Immunohistochemical staining of a subset of the resected thyroid cysts showed that the cyst-lining cells were positive for keratin and thyroglobulin, consistent with thyroid follicular cells. Atypical cyst-lining cells were found to have characteristic features (e.g., distinct cell borders, elongated shape, eosinophilic cytoplasm, and distinct nucleoli) and lacked nuclear crowding, intranuclear pseudoinclusions, and papillary architecture that, in many specimens, allowed them to be recognized as benign. The authors recommended that the subset of cells with the characteristic features described in the current study be reported as "consistent with benign cyst lining cells". 2005 American Cancer Society.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Cytol
                J Cytol
                JCytol
                Journal of Cytology / Indian Academy of Cytologists
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                0970-9371
                0974-5165
                Jul-Sep 2016
                : 33
                : 3
                : 120-124
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Pathology, Shiraz Medical School, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Maral Mokhtari, Department of Pathology, Shiraz Medical School, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz - 71937-11351, Iran. E-mail: maral_mokhtari@ 123456yahoo.com
                Article
                JCytol-33-120
                10.4103/0970-9371.188046
                4995867
                27756982
                91b35c70-d63b-4570-b848-1d89257b2740
                Copyright: © 2016 Journal of Cytology

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

                History
                Categories
                Original Article

                Pathology
                cystic papillary carcinoma,fine-needle aspiration cytology (fnac),hemophagocytosis,thyroid

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