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Orient Journal of Medicine ; 32(1-2): 28-38, 2020. tab
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1268294

ABSTRACT

Background:A majority of breast lesionisbenignin nature; benignbreast disease is four times more commonin Nigerian women. The percentage of unsatisfactory smears in breast cytology appears to behigher in benign conditions compared to malignant ones.The aim of this study is to determine the effectiveness of cytopathology in the diagnosis of benign breast disease in our institution.Methodology: This is a prospective study of 96 patients with benign breast disease seen during the study period. The patients were subjected to clinical assessment, fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) and open biopsy histopathology (as standardreference test).Results:One hundred andseventy-fourpatients with both FNACand histopathology reports were initially evaluated, 96 (55.2%) had benign while the rest (78, 44.8%) harbored malignant lumps. On analysis of the benign lumps, FNAC achieved high sensitivity (98.8%), specificity (96.9%) and overall diagnostic accuracy (98.0%) compared to clinical assessment with values of 83.3% (sensitivity), 82.1% (specificity) and 82.2% (overall diagnostic accuracy). The false positive rate (FPR, 2.3%) and false negative rate(FNR, 1.6%) reported for FNAC were equally better than figures of 14.9% (FPR) and 20.0% (FNR) documented for clinical assessment.Cytopathology was utilized insubclassifying 76 (79.2%) out of the 96 biopsy confirmed benign lumps; 49 slides were correctly typed giving a concordant rate of 64.5%.Conclusion:Fine needle aspiration cytology in our index study showed appreciable concordance with open biopsy histologyin the diagnosis and sub-classification of benign breast disease


Subject(s)
Biopsy , Cell Biology , Needles , Nigeria
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