Risk of malignancy in pancreatic cysts with cytology of high-grade epithelial atypia

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Abstract

Background: The risk of malignancy is weighed against the attendant risks of surgery in the clinical management of pancreatic cysts. The latter are a group of histologically diverse and prognostically variable entities, and the risk of malignancy therein is primarily based on imaging characteristics—with or without high-grade atypia. Cytologic criteria for high-grade atypia in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms have recently been defined, and its recognition in all pancreatic cysts may help to guide management. Methods: All patients who underwent endoscopic ultrasound–guided fine-needle aspiration for a pancreatic cyst at Massachusetts General Hospital from June 2015 to October 2016 were prospectively evaluated. Clinical data, radiographic impressions, biochemical analyses, and cytologic diagnoses of 118 pancreatic cyst fine-needle aspiration biopsy specimens from 106 patients were reviewed. Clinical and radiologic data were used as follow-up for 86 patients, and histology was obtained in 20 cases. Cysts were classified by imaging as high-risk, worrisome, or low-risk as defined by the 2012 Fukuoka consensus guidelines. Cytology was categorized as low-grade or high-grade. Malignant histology included mucinous cysts with high-grade dysplasia, invasive adenocarcinomas, and neuroendocrine tumors. The risk of malignancy (ROM) was determined by histological outcome. Results: The presence of high-grade cytology (P

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Hoda, R. S., Lu, R., Arpin, R. N., Rosenbaum, M. W., & Pitman, M. B. (2018). Risk of malignancy in pancreatic cysts with cytology of high-grade epithelial atypia. Cancer Cytopathology, 126(9), 773–781. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncy.22035

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