𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Fine-needle biopsy of pediatric lesions: A three-year study in an outpatient biopsy clinic

✍ Scribed by Carol C. Eisenhut; Douglas E. King; William A. Nelson; Lizabeth C. Olson; Roger W. Wall; Michael D. Glant


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
645 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
8755-1039

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


has an outpatient Fine Needle Biopsy Clinic, which evaluated 7,487 fine-needle biopsies (FNB) from January 1989 to February 1992. Two hundred eighty-eight (3.8%) of these specimens were collected from patients 19 years old or younger and this represents the largest study of this population in the scientiJic literature. The majority of these specimens were obtained from palpable masses in the head and neck region [lymph nodes (58.3%), thyroid (7.6%). and salivary gland (5.2%)] while a smaller number were collected from miscellaneous soft tissue (18.8%) and breast masses (10.1 %). Thirteen (4.5%) lfrom 12 patients) were diagnosed as malignant by FNB and 275 (95.5%) (264patients) were benign by FNB. This benign:malignant ratio (22:l) is significantly higher than has been reported from tertiary care institutions and is a reflection of the difference of this outpatient population.

Two hundred nine of 276 patients (75.7%) had adequate follow-up, including 13 7 (49.6%) patients followed by observation, 48 ( I %4%) patients followed by surgical biopsy, and 24 (8.7%) patients followed by some other modality: imaging studies, flow cytometry, or treatment. There was a single false positive diagnosis (a pilomatrixoma) and one (I) false negative interpretation (a cystic acinic cell carcinoma) resulting in a diagnostic sensitivity of 92.3% and a specificity of 99.6%. The positive predictive value was 92.3%. the negative predictive value was 99.6%, and the test eficiency was 99.3 %. The utility, cost-effectiveness and uniqueness of the clinic population is discussed.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES