Exfoliative respiratory cytology (part 1 of 2)

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A short primer on Exfoliative respiratory cytology September 2007

description

An introduction to respiratory cytology. Includes info on benign and malignant cytology findings. Discussion on different specimen types including sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, and brushings.

Transcript of Exfoliative respiratory cytology (part 1 of 2)

Page 1: Exfoliative respiratory cytology (part 1 of 2)

A short primer on

Exfoliative respiratory cytology

September 2007

Page 2: Exfoliative respiratory cytology (part 1 of 2)

Acquisition of specimens

• Sputum

• BAL / Bronchial wash

• Bronchial brush

• Pleural fluid

• Needle biopsy– Transbronchial– Transesophogeal– Transaortic

• Transthoracic FNA

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Sputum

• Accuracy– Patient is spontaneously producing sputum– Vigorous sampling (3-5 early morning specimens)– Preservation techniques– Location and size of tumor

• Central (SCLC, SCC)

– Sensitivity:• Sens 0.66, Spec 0.99 (average 16 studies)

• Prebronchoscopy– suspected Lung Ca: sens 0.10-0.74 (8 studies)

• Central sens 0.71, Peripheral sens 0.49 (17 studies)

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Sputum adequacy

• Numerous alveolar macrophages• Patients with abnormal sputum cytology

should undergo bronchoscopy...• Cells of bronchial cytology are

– Better preserved

– More numerous

– More cohesive

– Larger

– Lesions can be localized

– Cleaner background

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Bronchoalveolar lavage

• Useful for– Peripheral lesions– Severe diffuse disease– Evidence of inoperability– Diagnosis of opportunisitc infections– Interstitial lung disease– Evaluation of transplant rejection

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Evaluation• Adequacy: bronchial cells,

abundant macrophages

• Keep your eyes peeled for:– Fungus– Pneumocystis– Viral inclusions– Hemosiderin-laden

macrophages– Atypical or malignant cells

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Cues• Lymphocytes

– Sarcoid– Hypersensitivity pneumonia

• Drug reaction

• Neutrophils / Macrophages– Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis– Cytotoxic drug reaction– Langerhans histiocytosis

• Hemosiderin laden macrophages– Occult pulmonary hemorrhage (not acute phase)– Also associated with infection

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Bronchial wash cells Bronchial brush cells

• Ciliated columnar cells

• Terminal bar

• Nuclei

– Basal oriented

– Round to oval

– Nuclear membrane smooth

• Chromatin

– Can appear hyperchromatic and coarse

– Regularly distributed

Glandular cells

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Also

• Squamous cells– Similar to gyn pap– Mostly superficial

• Goblet cells– Basally oriented nucleus and

mucus– Usually one for every 5-10

ciliated cells– Abundant, finely vacuolated

cytoplasm filled with mucus– Abundant in asthma,

bronchitis, bronchiectasis, and allergies

• Clara cells– Nonciliated bronchiolar cells

• Pneumocytes• Macrophages

– Bean nuclei– Salt and pepper chromatin– Carbon histiocytes– Siderophages– Lipophages– Muciphages

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Nonspecific findings

• Reserve cells– Small round lymphocyte like– Central, hyperchromatic nuclei

• Bronchial irritation cells• Reactive atypia• Multinucleation• Regenerative/Reparative• Ciliocytophthoria (ciliated tufts)

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Other findings

• Ferruginous (asbestos) bodies• Elastin fibers• Charcot-Leyden crystals• Alveolar proteinosis

– Grossly opaque fluid, background of debris

• Corpora amylacea- – Related to pulmonary edema

• Calcospherites and Psammoma bodies• Contaminants (talc, pollen, plant/food cells)

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Diagnosis of lung cancer

• Suspicion based on abnormal radiologic findings or local or systemic effects

• Diagnosis depends on – Type (NSC vs SC)– Size and Location– Presence or absence of metastasis– Clinical status of patient

• Maximize sensitivity • Avoid multiple invasive or unnecessary

procedures.

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Small cell versus non-small cell

• Massive lymphadenopathy

• Direct mediastinal invasion– Mass in or adjacent to

hilum in 78% of cases

• Paraneoplastic syndromes– SIADH

– Ectopic ACTH

– Lambert-Eaton syndrome

• Diagnostic method based on presumed stage

• Thoracentesis if pleural effusion

• FNA of metastatic site

Diagnosis by easiest means:Diagnosis by easiest means:Sputum → thoracentesis → FNA of node or met → bronchoscopy with or without TBNA.

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Case of suspicious lesion

• Biopsy versus resection• Excisional biopsy is more sensitive• No role for TTNA in early stage disease or

in surgical candidates

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References:

• Diagnosis of Lung Cancer: The Guidelines. M. Patricia Rivera, Frank Detterbeck and Atul C. Mehta. Chest 2003;123;129-136. DOI 10.1378/chest.123.1_suppl.129S.

• The Art and Science of Cytopathology. Demay. Exfoliative respiratory cytology.

• Uptodate. Basic principles and technique of bronchoalveolar lavage.

• Bronchoscopy International: Art of Bronchoscopy, an Electronic On-Line Multimedia Slide Presentation. http://www.Bronchoscopy.org/Art of Bronchoscopy/htm. Published 2005 (Accessed 9/11/2007).

• www.cytologystuff.com

• Thanks to www.openoffice.org for allowing me to complete my presentation when Powerpoint didn’t work.