Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the capability of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and cytology and flow cytometric (FCM) deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) analysis in fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB)-derived materials for diagnosing malignancy of the parotid lesions and the efficacy of FCM analysis in FNAB. Magnetic resonance imaging findings and FCM results (ploidy and S + G2 + M phases [S + G2M] fraction) and cytology in FNAB-derived materials in 26 patients with 26 parotid lesions (12 benign lesions, 14 malignancies) were assessed for predicting malignancy. Flow cytometric results in aspirates were compared with those in surgically resected tissues. When a single predictor was used, cytology (92% accuracy) was most accurate for malignancy, followed by ill-defined margin (88% accuracy) and aneuploidy (88% accuracy). The combination of FCM and cytology raised the rate of sufficient materials from 92% to 100% and accuracy from 92% to 96% compared with cytology alone. The same highest accuracy (96%) was obtained with the combination of the ill-defined margin or other findings such as cytology, aneuploidy, or a high (S + G2M) fraction (6% <). Deoxyribonucleic acid ploidy in the FNAB showed full agreement with that in the surgical specimens. Receiver operating characteristic curves showed that the diagnosis of malignancy with (S + G2M) fraction in FNAB was superior to that in surgical specimens, but no significant difference was noted. A combination of MRI findings, cytology, and FCM results is optimal for diagnosing malignancies of the parotid lesions, and FNAB may replace the surgical specimens in FCM analysis.
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