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Aspiration Biopsy of Metastatic Carcinoma in Lymph Nodes of the Neck:<i>A Review of 1 101 Consecutive Cases</i>
112
Citations
12
References
1971
Year
Surgical OncologyPathologyOncologySurgical PathologyNeck OncologyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchRadiologyHealth SciencesPrimary TumoursSurvival RateEar MoldingHistopathologyAspiration BiopsyCancer DiagnosisMalignant DiseaseLymph NodesPrimary TumourTumoral PathologyNeck PathologyHead And Neck CancerMetastatic CarcinomaMedicine
AbstractFrom 1955 through 1966, metastatic carcinoma of lymph nodes of the neck was diagnosed in 1 101 patients by cytologic study of aspirate obtained by fine-needle biopsy. The primary tumours were located above the clavicle in 522 patients (47.4 %) and below this level in 529 (48.0 %). The primary tumour remained unknown in 50 patients (4.5 %). The cytologic diagnosis of metastasis was the first confirmation of malignancy in 382 patients (34.7 %). In the first month thereafter, no primary tumour was found in 133 of these patients (12.1 % of the series). The diagnosis was unknown at death in 79 patients (7.2 %). In a five-year follow-up of 656 consecutively examined patients the survival rate varied considerably, depending on the site of the primary tumour. The calculated five-year survival rate for the total series was 25.2%. Comparisons between the cytologic reports and subsequent histologic studies of the same lymph nodes were made in 257 cases. In 17 cases (6.6 %) a false negative cytologic report was given.
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