Abstract

Purpose: To determine the histopathologic characteristics of lacrimal sac specimens in adult patients undergoing external dacryocystorhinostomy (DCR) for acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction.Methods: A total of 471 lacrimal sac biopsies were obtained from 449 patients undergoing external DCR for symptoms or signs of acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction and examined histopathologically.Results: A total of 449 subjects including 283 (63%) female and 166 (37%) male subjects with mean age of 50.02 years underwent DCR and histopathologic examination of specimens. Presenting symptoms were epiphora in 411 patients (91%), history of acute dacryocystitis in 17 patients (4%) and obstruction revealed during ophthalmic examinations in 21 patients (5%). Histopathologic findings included: chronic inflammation in 450 patients (95.5%), fibrosis in 18 patients (3.8%), lymphoma in two patients (0.4%) and reactive lymphoid hyperplasia in one patient (0.2%). Lacrimal sac appearance during surgery was grossly abnormal in two cases: one case of lymphoma and one instance of reactive lymphoid hyperplasia.Conclusions: Chronic inflammation and fibrosis are the most common histopathologic findings in lacrimal sac specimens obtained during DCR. Only two cases of lymphoma (0.4%) were encountered in the series, one of which had a suspicious lacrimal sac appearance during surgery while the other case (0.2% of all specimens) was unsuspected. The rate of malignant etiology for NLD obstruction is low enough to justify lacrimal sac biopsy only in suspicious cases.

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