Diagnostic Accuracy of Frozen Section and Its Influence on Intraoperative Management of Indeterminate Epithelial Ovarian Tumors

被引:0
作者
Nyengidiki T. Kennedy
Ajit Sebastian
Dhanya S. Thomas
Anitha Thomas
Mayank Gupta
Ramani Manoj Kumar
Abraham Peedicayil
机构
[1] University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital,Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
[2] Christian Medical College & Hospital,Department of Gynecologic Oncology
[3] Christian Medical College & Hospital,Department of Pathology
来源
Indian Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2019年 / 10卷
关键词
Diagnostic test; Ovarian neoplasm; Frozen section; India;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The objective of this study is to determine the diagnostic accuracy of frozen section in detecting epithelial ovarian tumor histological types and its effect on management. A retrospective review was done of all patients who had an intraoperative frozen section for an indeterminate ovarian tumor over a six-year period. The reference standard was final histology. The validity indices for frozen section in diagnosing benign, borderline, and malignant lesions were determined. One hundred thirty-five intraoperative frozen section–diagnosed epithelial ovarian tumors were reviewed. The mean age was 44.9 ± 14.2 years, the median parity was 2, and 57% (77/135) of patients were post-menopausal. The commonest histological subtype was mucinous 48.1% (65/135) on frozen section and 46.7% (63/135) on final histology. The overall concordance rate of frozen section to final histology was 81.5% (ƙ = 0.719, p = 0.0001). The accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value of frozen section to diagnose benign lesions were 86.7%, 85.7%, 97.2%, and 79.2% respectively. In borderline tumors, the diagnostic test characteristics were 88.1%, 81.2%, 90.3%, and 72.2%. For malignant lesions, these values were 88.1%, 77.8%, 95.1%, and 91.3% respectively. The odds ratios for frozen section being correct were 40.9 (95% CI 14.8–113.5) for benign lesions, 40.3 (95% CI 13.4–121.3) for borderline tumors, and 67.4 (95% CI 20.5–222.0) for malignancy. Over-treatment or under-treatment occurred in 19.3% of patients. Intraoperative frozen section is useful in situations where the nature of the ovarian tumor is uncertain. However, borderline ovarian tumors are more likely to be over-diagnosed. About a fifth of patients received inappropriate treatments based on the frozen section report.
引用
收藏
页码:268 / 273
页数:5
相关论文
共 123 条
  • [1] Chen VW(2003)Pathology and classification of ovarian tumors Cancer 97 2631-2642
  • [2] Ruiz B(2011)Accuracy of intra-operative frozen section in the diagnosis of ovarian tumours J Pak Med Assoc 61 856-858
  • [3] Killeen JL(2016)Accuracy of intraoperative frozen section for the evaluation of ovarian neoplasms: an institutional experience World J Surg Oncol 14 91-2664
  • [4] Coté TR(2001)Behavior of borderline tumors with particular interest to persistence, recurrence, and progression to invasive carcinoma: a prospective study J Clin Oncol 19 2658-152
  • [5] Wu XC(2001)Diagnostic efficacy of tumor markers, sonography, and intraoperative frozen section for ovarian tumors Gynecol Obstet Investig 52 147-12
  • [6] Correa CN(2016)Accuracy of intraoperative frozen section in the diagnosis of ovarian neoplasms in comparison with histopathology in deciding the extent of surgery. A comparative study J Dental Med Sci 15 10-118
  • [7] Ilker A(2014)Frozen section in borderline ovarian tumours ; is it reliable? Eur J Obstet Gynaecol Reprod Biol 181 115-579
  • [8] Aykut B(2014)Validity of intraoperative diagnosis at laparoscopic surgery for ovarian tumours J Minim Invasive Gynecol 21 576-21
  • [9] Muge H(2006)Accuracy of intraoperative frozen section in the diagnosis of ovarian neoplasms: experience at a tertiary oncology center World J Surg Oncol 4 12-222
  • [10] Ibrahim HM(2017)Intraoperative frozen section of ovarian tumors. A 6-year review of performance and potential pitfalls in an Australian tertiary referral center Int J Gynecol Cancer 27 17-305