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Cytologic-histologic concordance in the diagnosis of neoplasia in canine and feline lymph nodes: a retrospective study of 367 cases.
Vet Comp Oncol. 2017 Dec; 15(4):1206-1217.VC

Abstract

Lymph nodes are frequently sampled in dogs and cats for the diagnosis of primary and metastatic neoplasia. We determined the accuracy of cytologic diagnosis in lymph nodes using histology as the gold standard. Lymph node reports (2001-2011) were retrospectively evaluated and diagnoses were categorized as neoplastic or non-neoplastic. Lymph nodes from 296 dogs and 71 cats included 157 (42.7%) non-neoplastic lesions, 62 (16.9%) lymphomas and 148 (40.3%) metastatic neoplasms. Cytology had a sensitivity of 66.6% [95% confidence interval (CI) 60.0-72.8%], specificity of 91.5% (CI 86.3-95.2%), and accuracy of 77.2% (CI 72.6-81.3%) for neoplasia. Likelihood of malignancy with a positive cytologic diagnosis of neoplasia was 93.0%. High proportions of false-negative results were found in mesenteric T-cell lymphoma (22/35, 63%, mainly cats), metastatic sarcoma (8/14, 57%) and metastatic mast cell tumour (15/48, 31%, mainly dogs). Factors contributing to discrepancies included well-differentiated lymphocyte morphology, focal distribution of metastases and poorly defined criteria for metastatic mast cell tumours.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA, USA.Department of Population Health and Reproduction, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA, USA.Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA, USA.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27523399

Citation

Ku, C-K, et al. "Cytologic-histologic Concordance in the Diagnosis of Neoplasia in Canine and Feline Lymph Nodes: a Retrospective Study of 367 Cases." Veterinary and Comparative Oncology, vol. 15, no. 4, 2017, pp. 1206-1217.
Ku CK, Kass PH, Christopher MM. Cytologic-histologic concordance in the diagnosis of neoplasia in canine and feline lymph nodes: a retrospective study of 367 cases. Vet Comp Oncol. 2017;15(4):1206-1217.
Ku, C. K., Kass, P. H., & Christopher, M. M. (2017). Cytologic-histologic concordance in the diagnosis of neoplasia in canine and feline lymph nodes: a retrospective study of 367 cases. Veterinary and Comparative Oncology, 15(4), 1206-1217. https://doi.org/10.1111/vco.12256
Ku CK, Kass PH, Christopher MM. Cytologic-histologic Concordance in the Diagnosis of Neoplasia in Canine and Feline Lymph Nodes: a Retrospective Study of 367 Cases. Vet Comp Oncol. 2017;15(4):1206-1217. PubMed PMID: 27523399.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Cytologic-histologic concordance in the diagnosis of neoplasia in canine and feline lymph nodes: a retrospective study of 367 cases. AU - Ku,C-K, AU - Kass,P H, AU - Christopher,M M, Y1 - 2016/08/15/ PY - 2015/12/29/received PY - 2016/06/24/revised PY - 2016/06/24/accepted PY - 2016/8/16/pubmed PY - 2018/4/26/medline PY - 2016/8/16/entrez KW - biopsy KW - fine-needle aspirate KW - lymphoma KW - metastasis KW - small animal SP - 1206 EP - 1217 JF - Veterinary and comparative oncology JO - Vet Comp Oncol VL - 15 IS - 4 N2 - Lymph nodes are frequently sampled in dogs and cats for the diagnosis of primary and metastatic neoplasia. We determined the accuracy of cytologic diagnosis in lymph nodes using histology as the gold standard. Lymph node reports (2001-2011) were retrospectively evaluated and diagnoses were categorized as neoplastic or non-neoplastic. Lymph nodes from 296 dogs and 71 cats included 157 (42.7%) non-neoplastic lesions, 62 (16.9%) lymphomas and 148 (40.3%) metastatic neoplasms. Cytology had a sensitivity of 66.6% [95% confidence interval (CI) 60.0-72.8%], specificity of 91.5% (CI 86.3-95.2%), and accuracy of 77.2% (CI 72.6-81.3%) for neoplasia. Likelihood of malignancy with a positive cytologic diagnosis of neoplasia was 93.0%. High proportions of false-negative results were found in mesenteric T-cell lymphoma (22/35, 63%, mainly cats), metastatic sarcoma (8/14, 57%) and metastatic mast cell tumour (15/48, 31%, mainly dogs). Factors contributing to discrepancies included well-differentiated lymphocyte morphology, focal distribution of metastases and poorly defined criteria for metastatic mast cell tumours. SN - 1476-5829 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27523399/Cytologic_histologic_concordance_in_the_diagnosis_of_neoplasia_in_canine_and_feline_lymph_nodes:_a_retrospective_study_of_367_cases_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -