Abstract

Rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) is a fine needle aspiration (FNA) technique for ensuring sampling adequacy and triaging samples. The Milan system for reporting salivary gland cytopathology (MSRSGC) is a standardised reporting system which aims to improve risk stratification. There is scant literature on the diagnostic value and agreement of MSRSGC on ROSE with final cytological diagnosis in salivary gland FNAs. We aimed to assess the concordance of MSRSCG categorisation and diagnosis on ROSE with final cytological and histological diagnosis. This prospective study included consecutive salivary gland FNAs for which ROSE was performed over a six-month period. MSRSGC category and diagnosis on ROSE were compared with the final cytological diagnosis and MSRSGC category, and histopathological diagnosis, where available. Sixty salivary gland aspirates were included. The adequacy rate with ROSE was 100%. Using the MSRSGC classification during ROSE, 26 (43.2%) samples were categorised as benign neoplasm, 21 (35%) as malignant neoplasm, 9 (15%) as non-neoplastic, and one each (1.7%) belonged to the remaining four categories. MSRSGC categorisation on ROSE concurred with final the cytological diagnosis in 58/60 cases (96.7%). Discrepancies in MSRSGC categories on ROSE included one atypia of undetermined significance with final report as non-neoplastic, and one non-diagnostic as suspicious for malignancy. Good correlation of MSRSGC categories on ROSE with final histopathological diagnosis (88.9% concordance) was also noted. MSRSGC on ROSE shows good concordance with final cytology and histopathology diagnosis, indicating that categorisation according to MSRSGC has utility in ensuring that adequate material is obtained and triaged appropriately for the diagnosis of salivary gland aspirates.

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