[Sensibility and specificity of cytology and colposcopy exams with the histological evaluation of cervical intraepithelial lesions]
Felipe Francisco Bondan Tuon, Marcio Sommer Bittencourt, Maria Alice Panichi, Alvaro Piazetta Pinto, Felipe Francisco Bondan Tuon, Marcio Sommer Bittencourt, Maria Alice Panichi, Alvaro Piazetta Pinto
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the correlation of cytopathological and colposcopycal diagnosis with the histopathological analysis from biopsy.
Methods: 80 patients from the colposcopy ambulatory of the Hospital e Maternidade Santa Brígida de Curitiba, PR, were selected. Those patients were sent to colposcopy under the following criteria: 1) previous abnormal cytopathological exams, 2) Indicative clinical data or, 3) Suspected lesions on gynecological exam. The statistical significance analysis of the results was done using the chi-square test. Sensibility, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) were also determined.
Results: The patients' mean age was 30.2 (+/-10.9). Cytopathological capability of identifying lesions was 50% when compared to histology. Its specificity was 77%, the sensibility 41%, the PPV 74%, and the NPV 45%. Colposcopy capability of identifying lesions was 50%. Its sensibility, specificity, PPV and NPV were 96%, 19%, 65% and 75% respectively. The two methods associated were capable of identifying 63% of the lesions.
Conclusions: Cytopathology was a high specificity exam, while colposcopy from those selected patients had a high sensibility. Colposcopy association with cytopathological screening, on those selected patients, significantly raises the diagnostic accuracy of cervical cancer precursor lesions.
Source: PubMed