Polymerase chain reaction-assisted evaluation of low and high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion cytology and reappraisal of the Bethesda System.

  • C Kühler-Obbarius
  • K Milde-Langosch
  • Thomas Löning
  • H E Stegner

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Between January 1991 and 1992, 5,652 cervical smears from 4,918 women were classified according to the traditional Papanicolaou/cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) categories and to the recently developed Bethesda System. Koilocytosis without atypia was identified in 3.7% (183 cases), CIN 1 in 1.8% (87 cases) and high grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (SILs) (CIN 2 and 3) in 1.9% (93 cases) (total, 363/4,918 = 7.4%). Human papillomavirus (HPV)-directed polymerase chain reaction analysis with general primers and subsequent hybridization with HPV 16/18 probe cocktail was carried out in 35% of cases with koilocytosis and dysplasia of any degree (127/363 cases). Seventy-five percent (95 cases) were positive in contrast to a detection rate of 30.8% (53/172 cases) for nonsuspicious smears. While low grade SILs were HPV positive in 67% (koilocytosis only) and 75% (CIN 1), high grade SILs harbored HPV in 87%. The rate of HPV 16/18 infections varied from 71.9% in low grade SILs to 88.9% in high grade SILs. Our results point to the questionable value of koilocytosis as a specific marker of HPV infection and call for confirmatory tests prior to classifying cervical smears suggestive of HPV infection in the low grade SIL category.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer5
ISSN0001-5547
StatusVeröffentlicht - 1994
pubmed 8091897