Thoracic Research and Practice
Clinical Study

Cell Type Accuracy of Bronchoscopic Biopsy Specimens in Primary Lung Cancer

1.

Department of Chest Diseases, SSK Süreyyapaşa Center for Chest Diseases and Thoracic Surgery, Istanbul, Turkey

2.

Department of Pathology, SSK Süreyyapaşa Center for Chest Diseases and Thoracic Surgery, Istanbul, Turkey

Thorac Res Pract 2000; 1: Turkish Respiratory Journal 17-20
Read: 463 Downloads: 273 Published: 06 October 2021

Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of bronchial biopsy specimens in establishing the specific cell type in pri­mary lung cancer, and to study the influence of several factors on this accuracy.

Design: The patients with lung cancer diagnosed by broncho­scopic biopsy specimens, who subsequently underwent thora­cotomy were studied. Pathology archive preparations of bronchial biopsy specimens and thoracotomy materials were reexamined by one pathologist. The following characteristics were evaluated in each patients: age, sex, bronchoscopic mor­phologic findings, location of bronchial lesion, presence of necrosis, tumor type, and degree of cell differentiation.

Patients: This study included 140 patients with primary lung cancer. Five patients were women and 135 were men with a mean age of 58.5 years (range 19 to 71).

Interventions: All of the pathology preparations were reex­amined by one pathologist.

Results: Of the 140 patients, 124 (88.6%) had cell agreement. The overall concordance was 0.65. The best agreement was obtained for squamous

cell carcinoma (Kappa, 0.68). Stage of the tumor and presence of necrosis had no effect on cell type agreement. Cell type accuracy was higher in central lesions than peripheral lesions (p=0.06). Mass lesions had higher his­tologic concordance than infiltrative lesions (p<0.05). Similar result was demonstrated by the degree of differentiation (p<0.01); the less the histologic differentiation, the greater the presence of diagnostic errors.

Conclusion: Many factors, such as tumor type, degree of cell differentiation, and the type of bronchial lesion can affect the cell agreement. We think that there will be difficulties in estab­lishing the cell type by bronchoscopic biopsy especially in poorly differentiated tumors, large cell carcinoma and adenosquamous carcinoma.

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EISSN 2979-9139