V600E BRAF mutation is emerging as an independent marker of papillary thyroid carcinoma aggressive behavior. Papillary thyroid carcinomas harboring this mutation should be extensively resected. However, this requires an unquestionable cytological diagnosis of malignancy. Thus, cytological specimens should be properly handled to provide both morphological and molecular information. Here, we assessed whether our method of preparation of fine-needle aspiration material is suitable for both tests. A series of 128, routinely performed, fine-needle aspirations was analyzed. Each nodule was punctured three times. A representative Diff-Quik smear prepared from the first two passages was evaluated onsite. When microscopy was diagnostic (n = 44), the third needle pass was dedicated to harvest material for BRAF testing; in the remaining cases (n = 84), additional direct smears for cytology were prepared and the remaining material in the needle plus the needle rinsing was collected for BRAF testing. Cellularity was adequate in 126/128 (98%) cases. Cytological diagnoses were inadequate (2%), benign (85%), follicular lesion of undetermined significance (5%), follicular neoplasms (2%), suspicious for malignancy (2%), and malignant (4%). Higher average of extracted DNA concentration was observed in the dedicated pass group (25.9 vs 7.95 ng/mul). However, the rate of successful exon 15 BRAF amplification was similar with (43/44; 97.7%) or without (79/84; 94%) the dedicated pass. Thus, our protocol is suitable for both tests. Whenever necessary BRAF testing may also be performed on the residual samples of thyroid nodules, without interfering with routine

Preparation of thyroid FNA material for routine cytology and BRAF testing: A validation study / Troncone, Giancarlo; Cozzolino, I; Fedele, M; Malapelle, Umberto; Palombini, Lucio. - In: DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY. - ISSN 8755-1039. - STAMPA. - 19:(2009), pp. 172-176. [10.1002/dc.21166]

Preparation of thyroid FNA material for routine cytology and BRAF testing: A validation study.

TRONCONE, GIANCARLO;MALAPELLE, UMBERTO;PALOMBINI, LUCIO
2009

Abstract

V600E BRAF mutation is emerging as an independent marker of papillary thyroid carcinoma aggressive behavior. Papillary thyroid carcinomas harboring this mutation should be extensively resected. However, this requires an unquestionable cytological diagnosis of malignancy. Thus, cytological specimens should be properly handled to provide both morphological and molecular information. Here, we assessed whether our method of preparation of fine-needle aspiration material is suitable for both tests. A series of 128, routinely performed, fine-needle aspirations was analyzed. Each nodule was punctured three times. A representative Diff-Quik smear prepared from the first two passages was evaluated onsite. When microscopy was diagnostic (n = 44), the third needle pass was dedicated to harvest material for BRAF testing; in the remaining cases (n = 84), additional direct smears for cytology were prepared and the remaining material in the needle plus the needle rinsing was collected for BRAF testing. Cellularity was adequate in 126/128 (98%) cases. Cytological diagnoses were inadequate (2%), benign (85%), follicular lesion of undetermined significance (5%), follicular neoplasms (2%), suspicious for malignancy (2%), and malignant (4%). Higher average of extracted DNA concentration was observed in the dedicated pass group (25.9 vs 7.95 ng/mul). However, the rate of successful exon 15 BRAF amplification was similar with (43/44; 97.7%) or without (79/84; 94%) the dedicated pass. Thus, our protocol is suitable for both tests. Whenever necessary BRAF testing may also be performed on the residual samples of thyroid nodules, without interfering with routine
2009
Preparation of thyroid FNA material for routine cytology and BRAF testing: A validation study / Troncone, Giancarlo; Cozzolino, I; Fedele, M; Malapelle, Umberto; Palombini, Lucio. - In: DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY. - ISSN 8755-1039. - STAMPA. - 19:(2009), pp. 172-176. [10.1002/dc.21166]
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/361914
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 2
  • Scopus 22
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 18
social impact