Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of salivary gland lesions in a selected patient population. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: To report the role of selective use of preoperative fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in patients with major salivary gland lesions at a tertiary care cancer center. DESIGN: Retrospective review of FNAB results compared with final histologic diagnosis as the criterion standard. SETTING: An academic tertiary care cancer center. PATIENTS: A consecutive series of 258 patients who underwent FNAB of major salivary gland lesions between 1996 and 2000, of whom 169 had surgical resection. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Predictive value, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy. RESULTS: FNAB was performed in 169 (37%) of 463 salivary gland lesions undergoing surgical procedures. A total of 126 lesions were in the parotid gland and 44 in the submandibular gland. Seventy-nine lesions (46%) were malignant. There were 150 FNAB specimens (89%) that were satisfactory for evaluation. The FNAB diagnosis of malignant or suspicious lesion had positive and negative predictive values of 84% and 77%, respectively. Ten of 20 false-negative FNAB results were low-grade lymphoma on final histologic assessment. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy diagnosis of a benign neoplasm had positive and negative predictive values of 83% and 88%, respectively. A cytopathologic diagnosis of a nonneoplastic lesion was predictive in only 47% of cases. Fifteen (47%) of 32 lymphocyte-predominant FNAB specimens were lymphoma on final histologic assessment. Ten (20%) of 49 patients with history of a solid, non-head and neck malignancy had evidence of distant metastasis to the salivary gland by histologic and/or cytopathologic assessment. CONCLUSIONS: An FNAB diagnosis of malignant or neoplastic major salivary gland disease is generally predictive of final histologic diagnosis. The predictive value of a negative FNAB finding is low, and should not supersede clinical suspicion. Cytologic findings of a lymphocyte-predominant lesion should prompt further workup to rule out lymphoma.

publication date

  • June 1, 2004

Research

keywords

  • Biopsy, Fine-Needle
  • Parotid Gland
  • Parotid Neoplasms
  • Submandibular Gland
  • Submandibular Gland Neoplasms

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 2642550039

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1001/archotol.130.6.773

PubMed ID

  • 15210562

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 130

issue

  • 6