Abstract

The Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytopathology (MSRSGC) was introduced in 2018 following other organ specific cytopathological reporting systems and it aimed at bringing a practical, evidence-based, user-friendly classification system with characterization and management algorithms. At the Department of Pathology, Fimlab Laboratories, Tampere, Finland all salivary fine needle aspirations (FNAs) have been given cytopathological diagnoses according to the MSRSGC since January 2018. Analyses of a one-year-period (January 2018–December 2018) consisted of 183 salivary FNA samples from 138 patients with correlation to histopathology in 90 cases with surgical follow-up. The MSRSGC performance in patient based analysis was as follows: accuracy was 90.9%, sensitivity was 61.5%, specificity was 100%, positive predictive value was 100%, and negative predictive value was 89.4%, respectively. Risks of malignancy (ROMs) in MSRSGC categories were: 0.0% (0/15) in non-diagnostic category, 100.0% (1/1) in non-neoplastic category biased by only one falsely-negative lymphoma case, 14.3% (1/7) in atypia of undetermined significance category, 0.0% (0/28) in benign neoplasm category, 27.3% (3/11) in neoplasm of uncertain malignant potential category, and 100% for both suspicious for malignancy (4/4) and malignancy (4/4) categories, respectively. The MSRSGC has been proven as a reliable classification system in salivary gland FNA routine diagnostics in a tertiary care center.

Highlights

  • The Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytopathology (MSRSGC) was introduced in [1] following a successful wave of organ specific reporting systems [2]

  • Risks of malignancy (ROMs) in MSRSGC categories were: 0.0% (0/15) in non-diagnostic category, 100.0% (1/1) in non-neoplastic category biased by only one falsely-negative lymphoma case, 14.3% (1/7) in atypia of undetermined significance category, 0.0% (0/28) in benign neoplasm category, 27.3% (3/11) in neoplasm of uncertain malignant potential category, and 100% for both suspicious for malignancy (4/4) and malignancy (4/4) categories, respectively

  • The MSRSGC has been proven as a reliable classification system in salivary gland fine needle aspirations (FNAs) routine diagnostics in a tertiary care center

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Summary

Introduction

The Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytopathology (MSRSGC) was introduced in [1] following a successful wave of organ specific reporting systems [2]. The goal of the MSRSGC was to develop a practical, evidence-based, user-friendly, and internationally accepted classification system. The clinicians endorsed the routine use of the MSRSGC [5]. Salivary gland tumors are one of the most heterogeneous groups of neoplasms with cytopathological features overlapping among the entities. Due to those facts, salivary gland cytopathology is one of the most challenging areas of cytology [6]. The effectiveness of salivary gland fine needle aspirations (FNA) was shown, as follows: sensitivity 86%, specificity 92%, and diagnostic accuracy 90% [7]. A recent meta-analysis of 16 456 cases from 92 studies confirmed that

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