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Multiple myeloma. The diagnostic role and prognostic significance of exfoliative cytology.

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1986

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Abstract

The clinical significance and diverse cytomorphologic spectrum of exfoliative cytology in multiple myeloma are presented from our 20-year retrospective and continuing prospective studies and from an extensive review of the literature. Of 370 myeloma patients studied retrospectively, 126 had at least one exfoliative cytologic specimen but only 6 had one or more specimens positive for myeloma. These included six pleural and two ascitic fluids and one sputum. In Papanicolaou-stained smears, myeoloma cells varied from essentially normal-appearing plasma cells to dispersed large malignant cells with little or no plasmacytoid features. Whereas all 203 cervical or vaginal, cerebrospinal, urine and bronchial specimens were negative for myeloma, 40% and 50% of the pleural and ascitic fluids, respectively, were positive. Four prospectively studied patients produced a total of seven positive serous fluid specimens. Follow-up data was available for eight patients with cytology positive for myeoloma. Six were dead within three months of the first positive specimen.