Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2021

Challenging of frozen diagnoses of small sclerosing pneumocytoma

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Aims An increasing number of small pulmonary nodules are being screened by CT, and an intraoperative diagnosis is necessary for preventing excessive treatment. However, there is limited literature on the frozen diagnosis of small sclerosing pneumocytomas (SPs). In particular, tumours smaller than 1\u2009cm are challenging for pathologists performing intraoperative frozen diagnosis. Methods In total, 230 cases of SP were surgically resected between January 2015 and March 2019 at Shanghai Chest Hospital, and of them, 76 cases were smaller than 1\u2009cm. The histology and clinical information of these 76 cases (33.0%, 76/230) were reviewed retrospectively, 54 cases of which were diagnosed intraoperatively, and the pitfalls were summarised. All diagnoses were confirmed on permanent sections and immunohistochemical sections. Results Histologically, 78.9% (60/76) of the small SP was dominated by one growth pattern, and solid and papillary growth pattern were the most commonly misdiagnosed circumstances. The rate of intraoperative misdiagnosis of these SP smaller than 1\u2009cm was 11.1% (6/54). Conclusions The main reason for misdiagnosis was failure to recognise the dual cell populations and the cellular atypia. Diagnostic clues include the gross morphology, the presence of dual-cell populations and a hypercellular papillary core, foam cell accumulation in glandular spaces and haemorrhage and haemosiderin on the periphery. In spite of awareness of pitfalls some cases may still be essentially impossible to diagnose on frozen section.

Volume 74
Pages 730 - 734
DOI 10.1136/jclinpath-2020-206729
Language English
Journal Journal of Clinical Pathology

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