Abstract

Rapid on-site evaluation/adequacy assessment (ROSE) is considered an essential component of thyroid fine needle aspiration (FNA) and many reported that it significantly decreases the nondiagnostic (ND) rate. The average reported ND rate without ROSE is about 20% and is improved by 12% when ROSE is implemented. However, the data also suggest that the improvement in ND rate after implementation of ROSE is directly related to the ND rate prior to ROSE and that it is mostly beneficial to aspirators with less experience. Several studies have also raised concerns regarding the impact of ROSE as it prolongs the procedure time, requires additional resources and increases the cost incurred by the additional fees. This resulted in a wide variation in the methodology applied to acquire the sample and implement ROSE across the globe with variation in the number of passes performed, stain utilized and the personnel reviewing the slides, e.g., cytotechnologists versus pathologist. This review summarized the literature reporting the impact of ROSE including its pros and cons, its accuracy and reproducibility, concordance between cytotechnologists and pathologists based on final diagnosis and highlights the different ways laboratories attempted to circumvent the challenges. In particular, the review highlights a unique approach practiced in Ito Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.

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