Cytology II: Gynae and Non-Gynae Cytology
Cytology II: Gynae and Non-Gynae Cytology
Cytology II: Gynae and Non-Gynae Cytology
Cytology II:
Gynae and Non-gynae
Cytology
Dr Richard Wing-Cheuk Wong
Consultant Pathologist
Department of Pathology
United Christian Hospital
Part 1:
Gynecologic Cytology
Reference: The Bethesda System for Reporting Cervical Cytology.
Nayar R, Wilbur DC, (Eds), 3rd Edition. Springer, 2015.
Gynecologic cytology
Ectocervix
Endocervix
Metaplastic
squamous
epithelium
① ② I pre-malignant lesion)
• CIN 1
• Koilocytosis
• Diagnosis based on nuclear disarray
• Presence of koilocytes (superficial squamous in the parabasal layers
I basement membrane
cells with enlarged hyperchromatic nuclei and above
Reporting of Reporting of
positive & some most negative
negative smears smears by
by pathologist cytotechnologist
The Bethesda System for Reporting
Cervical Cytology (2014)
• Online atlas
• https://bethesda.soc.wisc.edu
Squamous
↓
Exodus pattern
• Ball-like clusters of endometrial
stromal cells surrounded by cells
endometrial glandular cells at the landular
I
periphery
endometrial
stromal cells
Directly sampled endometrial cells
in gynecologic cytology
• Large tissue fragments composed
of epithelial cells (center) and
stromal cells (periphery).
A
typical glandulan cell
•
vs
hormochromatic/hypochromatic
LSIL has enlarged hyperchromatic nuclei, coarse HSIL has hyperchromatic nuclei, coarse
chromatin and LOW N/C ratio chromatin and HIGH N/C ratio
LSIL HSIL
condensation of
peripheral
&
cytoplasm
LSIL may contain koilocytes with abnormal HSIL may exist as isolated cells (especially in
nuclei surrounded by cavitating perinuclear halo liquid-based), which can be easily missed
Low-grade squamous
intraepithelial lesion (LSIL)
• Squamous cells with enlarged
hyperchromatic nuclei
• Nuclear enlargement at least 3
times the size of intermediate
cell nucleus
• Coarse chromatin (or dense
smudgy chromatin) intermediatecell
Koilocytes
• Sharply defined perinuclear halo
• Condensation of cytoplasm
around the periphery
• Nuclear abnormalities must be
present
Atypical squamous cells of
undetermined significance (ASC-US)
• ASC-US is used for changes that
are suggestive of LSIL but
quantitatively or qualitatively ① coarse chromatin
&variable in size
(miomicHSIL)
insufficient for a definitive &
interpretation
• Usually these cases have scanty
cells with high N/C ratio but the
nuclear abnormalities are not
florid enough
Squamous cell carcinoma
(dirtybg)
characteristic of invasivetumor ->
Necroting bg:cell debris, fragments, degenerated cells
(majority)
Keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma
• Variation of cell size and shape, ↓
spindle cell
orangeophilic cytoplasm
• Nuclei often dark and opaque
nuclearde 555 lobes
• rinbg cytoplasm
+
④
Tumour diathesis (necrotic debris
and degenerated RBCs) often
present in the background
Mimics of HSIL and SCC
Atrophy vs HSIL HSIL vs SCC
fine chromatin
&
Parabasal cells in atrophy have high N/C ratio HSIL may contain occasional cells with
and may mimic HSIL elongated cytoplasm, which may mimic SCC
Adenocarcinoma in-situ (AIS) Endocervical adenocarcinoma
pseudostratified
strip
Adenocarcinoma in-situ
• Glandular cells arranged in clusters
or pseudostratified strips (P.59pc) feathering (elongated nuclei)
&
•
⽊栅栏
Palisading nuclear arrangement
⑤
with “feathering” (nuclei
protruding from periphery)
• ① Hyperchromatic nuclei
• ④Coarse chromatin
• ④ Nucleoli usually inconspicuous
• Mitosis and apoptotic bodies may
be seen
Adenocarcinoma
(endocervical vs endometrial)
General features of adenocarcinoma
• Glandular cells with vacuolated
cytoplasm and pleomorphic nuclei
• Irregular chromatin distribution,
chromatin clearing and nuclear
membrane irregularities
• Prominent nucleoli
• Tumour diathesis may be present
Endocervical (verynecroticbg)
• Usually some cells with features of
AIS, larger cell size & nuclear size
features of adenocar
+
neutrophils
neutrophils, watery diathesis
↓ not too
dirty by (X so necrotic
Atypical glandular cells (AGC)
• Atypical glandular cells is the term
used for glandular cells with
nuclear abnormalities that are
indefinite for neoplasia
• Ideally they should be specified as
“atypical endocervical cells” or
“atypical endometrial cells” as far
as possible, but in daily practice
the diagnosis of AGC is usually
sufficient
• For cases with relatively
significant atypia, the diagnosis
“AGC, favour neoplastic” may be
used
Candida Herpes (HSV)
①multi-nucleated
① hyphae
② ground glass nucleus
③ chromatin
margination
Actinomyces Trichomonas
② small nucleus
③ eosinophilic
granulated
cytoplasm
Strengths and limitations of cervical
cytology
Strengths Limitations
• Assessment of the whole • Sampling
transformation zone • Low sensitivity and more false
• instead of individual sites in biopsy negatives as compared to HPV
I
testing more sensitive
• Exfoliative cytology
• Examination of cells that are spontaneously shed into body fluid or
scraped/removed from body surface
• E.g. urine cytology, sputum / bronchial cytology, effusion fluid
cytology, biliary cytology, CSF cytology
• Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC)
• Examination of cells that are aspirated from a mass through a
needle
• E.g. breast, thyroid, salivary gland, lymph node, lung, pancreas
Non-gynecologic Exfoliative
Cytology
Clinical utility of non-gynecologic
exfoliative cytology
Neutrophils
Urine Cytology
↑hyperchromasiais
① high N:2
High grade urothelial carcinoma
Note the coarse
chromatin and
nuclear
pleomorphism
Mitotic
figure
7
Urine Cytology
• In clinical practice, the cellularity of abnormal cells should
be high when we make a cytologic diagnosis of carcinoma
• If the abnormal cells are present in small numbers, or if
some of the morphologic features are lacking, we usually
diagnose such cases as “atypical cells” or “suspicious of
malignancy”
Atypical cells
with enlarged
hyperchromatic
nuclei but just
mildly increased
N/C ratio
Urine Cytology
cells
2 squamous
• Normal constituents in sputum and
bronchial
↑
cytology:
bronchial cells
Macrophage
small nucleus
#
Bronchial cells &terminal bartcilia
Bronchial cells
Sputum and Bronchial Cytology
nuclear pleomorphism
• Chromatin may be fine or coarse
• Prominent nucleoli
②
↓
typical of adenocarcinoma
Cadeno:trevs scci-ve)
TTF-1 immunohistochemistry
Morphologic features of squamous
cell carcinoma
X densecytoplasm
I
pointed edges
/
1515A
Ex specific)
Note the orangeophilic cytoplasm (on
Pap stain) with hyperchromatic enlarged
nuclei of squamous cell carcinoma
Spindle or tadpole-shaped cells
are occasionally seen in
squamous cell carcinoma
Morphologic features of small cell
carcinoma
• Loose aggregates of round to fusiform cells
• High N/C ratio and scant cytoplasm
• Nuclear molding
①
• Hyperchromatic nuclei with stippled (“salt-and-pepper”) chromatin
②
• ⑨Indistinct nucleoli (occasional small nucleoli possible)
• Apoptotic bodies and/or mitosis
④
• Crushing and smearing artifact common
• Cell size usually small but larger cells possible
nuclei
push against
each other
/
Small cell carcinoma
- Note the nuclear molding
Small cell carcinoma is characterized
by stippled or “salt-and-pepper”
chromatin pattern, typical of
neuroendocrine differentiation
nuclear
molding
Benign cellular changes that may
mimic lung carcinoma
Macrophages
Mesothelial cells
Effusion Fluid Cytology
• Metastatic carcinoma (usually adenocarcinoma) is the most common
positive diagnosis in effusion fluid cytology
• The presence of two populations of cells (mesothelial cells and
carcinoma cells) is an important clue to recognizing metastatic
carcinoma in effusion fluid
• Adenocarcinoma typically presents as three-dimensional ball-like
clusters and isolated cells with pleomorphic nuclei and prominent
nucleoli
• Cell block with immunohistochemistry could help confirm the
tumour type and predict the likely site of origin for metastatic
carcinoma
• Other tumour types may also be detected in effusion fluid cytology
(e.g. mesothelioma, lymphoma)
Metastatic adenocarcinoma in
effusion fluid cytology
Carcinoma cells
Carcinoma cells
Mesothelial cells
↳ fine chromatin
Carcinoma cells
Carcinoma cell (recognized
by nuclear atypia in this
isolated cell)
Effusion Fluid Cytology
② distinct nucleoli
Reactive mesothelial cells
BerEP4 immunohistochemistry
(epithelial marker) - negative
Calretinin immunohistochemistry
(mesothelial marker) - positive
Non-neoplastic findings in
non-gynecologic exfoliative
cytology
• Viral inclusion
• E.g. Herpes simplex virus inclusion
• Fungal organism
• E.g. Pneumocystis jirovecii
Herpes simplex virus
(HSV) inclusion
#jEziE Fg!
• Online atlas
• https://www.papsociety.org/image-
atlas/
Cibas ES, Ali SZ. The 2017 Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid
Cytopathology. J Am Soc Cytopathol. 2017 Nov-Dec;6(6):217-222.
The Bethesda System for Reporting
Thyroid Cytopathology (2017)
• 6 categories
• Nondiagnostic / Unsatisfactory
• Benign
• Atypia of undetermined
significance (AUS) / Follicular lesion
of undetermined significance (FLUS)
• Follicular neoplasm / Suspicious for
a follicular neoplasm
• Suspicious for malignancy
• Malignant
Cibas ES, Ali SZ. The 2017 Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid
Cytopathology. J Am Soc Cytopathol. 2017 Nov-Dec;6(6):217-222.
The Bethesda System for Reporting
Thyroid Cytopathology (2017)
Cibas ES, Ali SZ. The 2017 Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid
Cytopathology. J Am Soc Cytopathol. 2017 Nov-Dec;6(6):217-222.
Thyroid FNAC – Nondiagnostic