Cervical Cytology
Cervical Cytology
Cervical Cytology
Cytology
-
Cytologist
Conventional Smear
2.
-
Screening Tool
Used in healthy individual who are at risk of particular disease
o
Cervical Cytology
History
Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723)
o
Develop the microscope
o
First cytologist
o
Recorded the appearance of RBC, spermatozoa, bacteria,
yeast, diatoms
2.
Robert Hooke (1635-1703)
o
English inventor, improved the microscope
o
Coined the term cell
3.
Matthias Schleiden
o
Cell theory (with Schwann)
o
Proposed that all plants were made of cells
4.
Theodor Schwann
o
Cell theory
o
Proposed that all life begin as a single cell & all animal
tissues were composed of cells
5.
Donne
o
Published his work on cells found in respiratory tract
6.
Mueller
o
Published book containing microscopic appearances of
cancer cells
7.
Charles Spencer
o
Improved the design, magnification and clarity of CA cell
images
8.
Carl Zeiss
o
Produced excellent microscope
9.
August Kohler
o
Kohler illumination
1.
Cervical Screening
2.
-
Exfoliative Cytology
Collection of cells that have spontaneously shed from the surface
of the tissue
Malignant Cells: loss of cohesiveness from parent cells
Involves:
o
Scraping technique
Sampling device:
Sample device:
Bronchial brush
o
Free nylon bristles
o
Gently rubbed over the surface of suspicious
lesions during bronchoscopy
o
Washing of body surfaces/cavities
Simpliest
Invasive technique
Ultrasound
Specimen Consideration
-
Preparation Techniques
1.
Due
o
o
Due
o
to collection error
Tumor present but not in the sample (Failure to collect)
Collect with insufficient quantity
to cytologist error
Tumor cells are present in the specimen but are not detected
or incorrectly interpreted
Specimen Containers
-
2.
Transport Media
-
3.
Fixation
-
4.
5.
6.
Direct Smear
o
Mucoid specimens (Mucus)
Constituents of mucus:
Mucin (glycoprotein)
Inorganic salts
Highly viscous
Ultrasonic disintegration
Enzymes
Peptides
Cytofunnel 0.5 mL
Alternative to TCB
Combination of Techniques
a.
Density Grandient Centrifugation followed by Gravity
Sedimentation
8.
3.
4.
Demonstration Techniques
1.
a.
b.
2.
Differentiator
o
Alkaline Solution
First counterstain
Dehydration
Absolute alcohol
Clearing
Mounting
Giemsa
May-Grunwald-Giemsa
Jenner
Wright
Leishman
o
Romanowsky effect
pH 6.8-7.2
o
Rapi-Diff, Diff Quick Romanowsky commercial staining kits
Special Stains
o
Periodic Acid Schiff (PAS) method for carbohydrate
(glycogen)
o
Grocotts methenamine silver method for Pneumocystis
jiroveci
o
Replaced by immunocytochemistry
Immunocytochemistry
o
Cytological; detection of special cell constituents based on
antigenic structure
o
Uses antibodies that binds with samples antigen
o
For serous fluid and FNA diagnosis (determines primary
lesion)
a.
Direct Methods
Poor sensitivity
b.
Indirect Methods
For ag concentration
ABC technique
Avidin
o
Derived by streptavidin
o
High molecular weight glycoprotein which
reacts to biotin forming Avidin-biotin complex
ENZYME
Horseradis
h
peroxidase
Alkaline
Phosphatas
e
5.
CHROMOGEN
Hydrogen Peroxide
DAB (3,3diaminobenzidene)
New Fuchsin
END RESULT
Brown
reaction
Red color
Molecular Techniques
o
Molecular Pathology
Prognosis
Diagnosis
Treatment monitoring
Cytogenitics
Hybridization techniques
Categories of Hazard
1.
2.
3.
Microbiological hazard
Chemical hazard
Physical hazard
Principle
Condition must be relatively common and disabling
Treatment should be available
Natural history of target condition must have been studied
There must be a recognizable, treatable precursor or presymptomatic phase
Cost effective
The screening test must be reliable, valid and repeatable
High sensitivity and specificity
Target Population
Individuals at risk of having or developing the target condition
Prevalence
Proportion of population that has target condition
Coverage
Proportion of the target population that has been screened
Most important factor in influencing the effectiveness of screening
program
Low coverage = failure, 70-80% coverage = success
Dependent upon:
o
Target population that has access to screening program
o
Target population that actually participate (uptake)
Informed Consent
Sensitivity
Measure of ability of a screening test to identify the positives
(individuals within the target population that have the target
condition)
sensitivity=
true positives
100
true positives+ false negatives
True Positives
Individuals within the target population that have the target
condition and test positive
False Negatives
Individuals within the target population that have the target
condition and test negatives
Specificity
Measure of ability of a screening test to identify the
negatives(individuals within the target population that do NOT
have the target condition)
specificity=
true negatives
100
true negatives+ false positives
True Negatives
Individuals within the target population that do not have the
target condition and test negative
False Positives
Individuals within the target population that do not have the
target condition and test positive
Positive Predictive Value
Measure of the accuracy of a positive result
clinicians gold standard
PPV =
true positives
100
true positives+false positives
NPV =
truenegatives
100
true negatives +false negatives
Cervical Screening
Paps Smear
Commonly used screening tool
Developed by George Papanicolaou
Precursor lesion: CIN/SIL (Cervical Intraepithelial
Neoplasia/Squamous Intraepithelial Lesion)
CGIN (Cervical Glandular Intraepithelial Neoplasia)
Exclusion Criteria
Men
Total hysterectomy
Female virgins
Women >65 years old with 3 negative smears for previous 10
years
Screening Interval
NHS
Divided into
o
Basal cellsLeast mature
o
Divides and move gradually outwards as they
undergo morphological changes
Parabasal cells
Intermediate cells
Superficial cells
o
Most mature
o
Largest
o
Most rigid
o
For protection of underlying tissue
Squamocolumnar Junction
Differentiation or maturation
Process of cell specialization following cell division in both
ectocervix and endocervix
Uterus
Pear shaped hallow muscular organ (7.5 cm long, 5 cm wide in
non-pregnant state)
House and protects fetus during gestation
Supplies blood
o
Myometrium
5-13
14
Same
Proliferative
Phase
Endocervix
secretes mucus
Endometrium
regrows
Superficial cells
proliferate
Ovulatory Phase
Mucus becomes
thin and watery
LH surge
Dominance of
Superficial cells
Increased Estrogen
secretion
15-28
Release of egg
from Graafian
follicle
Luteal Phase
Corpus luteum
secrets Estrogen
and Progesterone
Secretory Phase
Endometrium
secretes uterine
milk (thick fluid rich
in sugar, amino
acids, GP that
nourishes early
embryo in the
event of
fertilization)
Mucus secretion
declines, becomes
thick, impenetrable
to sperm
Maturation of
squamous
epithelium to
intermediate cells
Intermediate cells
dominate the
sample with
lactobacilli &
cytolysis
Cytology During:
Menstrual cycle
Menstrual Phase (Day 1-4)
Menstrual debris
Proliferative phase (5-14)
Superficial cells
Few intermediate cells
Less menstrual debris
Secretory phase (15-28)
High intermediate cells
Numerous lactobacilli and cytolysis
Pregnancy
Navicular cells boat cells
Post-partum
Lactating Parabasal cells
Non-lactating same with reproductive women
Menopause (Cessation of Menstrual cycle)
Early menopause
Intermediate cells
Mild menopause
Parabasal cells
Late menopause
Deep parabasal cells singly or in sheets (post-menopausal
atrophic pattern)
Blue blobs (degenerative Parabasal cells
Non Epithelial Cells in Cervical Samples
RBC
7-8 um, bincocave disc
Lysis: pink, granular appearance
Responsible for oxygen supply
Normal physiological process: menstruation
Pathological conditions: inflammation/ cancer
PMNs
12 um, granular cytoplasm, multi-lobed nuclei
Plenty during acute stages of infection/inflammation, Extremely
numerous during malignant disease
Inflammatory exudate: term describing large infiltrate of
polymorphs in cervical sample
Macrophages (Histiocytes)
Variable in size, foamy cytoplasm, eccentric bean-shaped nucleus
Presence of ingested particulate material
Component of inflammatory exudate
Giant Macrophage: (>100um) seen in post-menopausal women
Lymphocytes
Small round cells with rounded nuclei & narrow rim cytoplasm
Minor component of inflammatory exudate
Increase when inflammatory conditions become long-standing
Other Inflammatory Cells
Eosinophils
Pink granular cytoplasm, bilobed nucleus
Plasma Cells
Activated lymphocytes
Chromatin pattern: clockface/ cartwheel chromatin
Stromal Cells
Elongated & spindle shaped w/ round to oval nuclei & wispy
cytoplasm
Originate from connective tissue underlying basement membrane
Rarely found in cervical sample except during menstruation
Mimic neoplastic epithelial cells
Microorganisms in Cervical Samples
Bacteria
Lactobacillus
3-5 um, rod shaped
Utilizes glycogen to lactic acid (maintains acidic pH of vagina)
Glycogen: stored within intermediate squamous epithelial cells
Actinomyces-like organisms
Colonize intrauterine contraceptive device without causing
infection
Cause ascending infection & pelvic inflammatory disease
Characterized by tangled mass of hematoxyphilic filaments in
Papanicolaous stain
Bacterial vaginosis
Inflammatory condition of vagina
Cause: Anaerobic coccobacilli (Gardnerella vaginalis)
o
Part of normal bacterial population of vagina
o
Causes fishy smelling vaginal discharge
o
Clue cells: Hazy blue appearance of squamous epithelial
cells
Fungi
Candida
Commonly found in lower genital tract
Usually exists as spores but can elongate to form psuedohyphae
(eosinophilic tangled filaments with septa)
Protozoa
Single-celled eukaryotic organisms
Trichomonas vaginalis
o
Obligate pathogen in lower female genital tract
o
Sexually transmitted
o
With flagella
o
With smudgy grey nucleus & tiny pink granules within
cytoplasm
Virus
HSV (Herpes Simplex Virus)
Multinucleated giant cells with nuclei appear moulded together
(empty ballooned appearance)
Ground glass appearance of chromatin
With intranuclear viral inclusions (large round bodies in center of
nucleus)
HSV Type 1
Cause ulcerating lesions of the mouth, eyes, and skin
HSV Type 2
Sexually transmitted
Infects genital and anal regions
Causes meningitis and skin lesions
HPV (Human Papilloma Virus)
HPV Types 16, 18, 31, 33, and 45
High-risk types
Associated with high-grade CIN, invasive squamous cell
carcinoma of the cervix, and cervical adenocarcinoma
HPV Types 6, 11, 42, 43, and 44
Low-risk category
Associated with benign warts and low-grade cervical
intraepithelial neoplasia.
Cytological Diagnosis
Koilocytes
o
Squamous cells (usually superficial cells) with a large
perinuclear clear space
o
Thickened uneven rim of dense cytoplasm (wire loop
appearance)
Cytology of Inflammation
Acute Cervicitis
Initial response to tissue injury
Presence of exudate is often
Main cells involved: neutrophils
Characteristics:
o
Marked increase in inflammatory cells (neutrophils)
o
Epithelial cells are covered by exudate of neutrophils, some
accompanied with leucophagocytosis
o
Lymphocytes & plasma cells if inflammation persists
o
Specific morphological changes in epithelial cells
Results in complete resolution & regeneration if cause of
inflammation is removed
Chronic Cervicitis
Occurs if cause of inflammation persists
Exudates with inflammatory cells (macrophage)
Characteristics
o
Heavy infiltrate of lymphocytes and plasma cells
o
Fragile columnar epithelium may react undergoing squamous
metaplasia
o
Hyperkeratosis/ parakeratosis
Hyperkeratosis
Squamous epithelium has
thick layer
Absence of nuclei
Cytoplasm is densely
orange
o
Parakeratosis
Pyknotic nucleus is visible
in deep orange
SUPERFICAL
CELLS
ENDOCERVICAL
CELLS
METAPLASTIC
CELLS
ENDOMETRIAL
CELLS
Shape
Polygonal
Honeycomb sheets
Palisaded strips
Loosely associated
single columnar cells
Depends on degree
of maturation
Round/oval cell
clusters with dense
core of stromal
cells & periphery of
larger epithelial
cells
Size
Cytoplas
m
Nucleus
Round/oval
12-30um
diameter
Dense green
Round/oval
8um diameter
Occupies half of
the cell
Polygonal
Sometimes w/ folded
edge
30-40um diameter
35-45um diameter
Cyanophilic
Sometimes
eosinophilic
Eosinophilic
Round/ oval
8um diameter
Chromati
Evenly distributed
Fine vesicular
n
Vesicular
CHAPTER FIVE: ABNORMAL CERVICAL CYTOLOGY
Two main types of cervical cancer
1.
Squamous cell carcinoma
75% of all cervical cancer
Associated with HPV type 16
2.
Adenocarcinoma
Usually affects women under age of 35
Associated with HPV type 18
Cofactors
Smoking
Immunosuppression
Hormones
Genetics
Mechanism of HPV
Virus contact with basal epithelial cells
Capsid is shed, viral DNA enters one or more basal cells
Viral DNA remains in episomal form, replicates in tandem with
host cells
LATENT PHASE
o
No new viral particles are produced
o
No clinical/cytological manifestation
PRODUCTIVE PHASE
o
DNA replication
o
Intermediate/superficaial layers
o
Cytopathic effect koilocytosis
Cyanophilic
w/ projections
Spider cells
Vesicular
Variable in size
Small nucleoli
Crumpled nuclei
Hyperchromatic
8um diameter
30-45um diameter
Cyanophilic
Finely vacuolated
Sometimes filled
with mucus
Oval
Sometimes with
nipple like
protrusions
(occasionally with
one or more small
nucleoli)
Fine
o
o
Malignant transformation
Malignant tumor formation
CIN/ SIL
Precancerous lesion of squamous cell carcinoma
Characterized by replacement of normal cervical squamous
epithelium with neoplastic cells
Introduced by Richart in 1967
Slow growing lesion usually taking around 10 years
CIN lesions can progress, regress, or persist
Progression from CIN3 to invasive cancer can take a further 812
years
Approximately one-third of cases of CIN1 will progress to CIN3 if
left untreated
About two-thirds of cases of CIN3 will progress to invasive cancer
if left untreated
Diagnosis of CIN/SIL is based on nuclear atypia characterized by:
1.
Nuclear enlargement
2.
Hyperchromasia
3.
Presence of chromatin granules
4.
Variation of nuclear size and shape
3 Grades of CIN/SIL are diagnosed by:
1.
2.
3.
Undifferentiat
ed neoplastic
cells
Cytoplasmic
differentiation
Mitotic Figures
(appearance)
Low
-
CIN 1
Lower 1/3
CIN 2
Middle 3nd
CIN 3
Full thickness
Upper 3rd
No sign
Lower 2/3
(Abnormal)
Frequent
(Abnormal)
More than 80% of LSIL and 100% of HSIL associated with high
oncogenic risk HPV
Progression to invasive carcinoma may take place on few months
to more than a decade
Persistent infection with high risk HPV is necessary cause for CIN
Dyskaryosis
Nuclear
enlargeme
nt
NCR
Chromatin
pattern
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
Mild
<1/2 diameter
of the cell
Moderate
1/2 2/3 of the
cell diameter
Severe
> 2/3 of the
cell diameter
<0.5
Uneven
0.5 0.67
Uneven
> 0.67
Uneven
Hyperchromasi
a
Multinucleation
Plentiful
With angular
cell border
Nuclear Hyperchromasia
Multinucleation
Irregular nuclear membrane
Reduced
Abnormal
Borders:
cellular
angular/
maturation
rounded
(keratinization)
Dense cell
clusters
(hyperchromati
c crowded cell
groups
Microinvasive Carcinoma
Pre-clinical stage of invasive carcinoma
<5mm deep lesion up to 7mm wide
Well-differentiated Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Large islands of tumour cells with intercellular bridges, epithelial
pearls, and keratinization
Close resemblance to their normal counterparts
Endometrial adenocarcinoma
Fifth leading cancer in women
cervical cytology is an inappropriate test for endometrial cancer
o
Endometrial cells are a normal finding in cervical samples
taken from pre-menopausal women (12th day to 25th-28th
day)
o
May also be shed at any time during the cycle due to benign
endometrial polyps, fibroids, intrauterine contraceptive
device
o
Cells shed from a well-differentiated endometrial cancer may
appear indistinguishable from normal endometrial cell
Cytological features of endometrial carcinoma
Influenced by
Degree of differentiation of the tumour
Histological subtype
Extent of the neoplasm
State of preservation of the malignant cells
Features:
Scant 3D balls of malignant cells with scalloped edges.
Nuclei larger than normal endometrial cells, and frequently
hypochromatic
Prominent and multiple eosinophilic nucleoli.
Cytoplasmic vacuoles of mucin. Large vacuoles may push the
nucleus to one edge of the cell (signet-ring formation.)
Leucophagocytosis)
Tumour diathesis
Degenerate tumour cells may appear squamoid, with pyknotic
nuclei and eosinophilic/orangeophilic cytoplasm.
Adenocarcinomas from the fallopian tubes and ovaries
Very rare
Not morphologically distinguishable from endometrial
adenocarcinoma
Clean background
Psammoma bodies
o
Rounded calcified protein deposits that have a weak
association with ovarian cancer
Paps Numerical System
Class I
Absence of atypical or abnormal cells
Class II
Atypical but no evidence of malignancy
Class
Cells suggestive of but not conclusive to malignancy
III
Class
Cells strongly suggestive to malignancy
IV
Class V
Cells conclusive to malignancy
CHAPTER SEVEN: DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY
Underlying principles of diagnostic cytology
CSF