Korean J Cytopathol.
1997 Dec;8(2):129-134.
The Significance of AgNOR Count in Body Fluid: Differential between reactive mesothelial cells & malignant cells
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Hanyang University.
Abstract
-
To distinguish reactive mesothelial cells from malignant cells in body fluid, we
applied silver staining of nucleolar organizer regions(AgNORs) to ethanol fixed
cytologic preparations. Fifty aspirated samples of benign(22 cases) and malignant(26
cases) body fluids were studied using the one step silver staining method. Two
cytologically atypical samples were also included in the study. In malignant cases
the mean AgNOR count was 3.56+/-0.81, while in benign cases the mean AgNOR
count was 2.02+/-0.33. The difference of AgNOR counts between these two groups
were statistically significant(p<0.001). The mean of atypical cases was 2.91. Both
were diagnosed as malignant in follow-up cytology. In malignant effusions, there is
statistically significant difference in AgNOR counts between cells forming complex
papillae or clusters and singly scattered cells(p<0.05), 3.29+/-0.95 and 3.83+/-0.55,
respectively. We concluded that AgNOR count appears to be useful as a diagnostic
tool especially when the cytologic differentiation is difficult.