Turkish Journal of Pathology

Türk Patoloji Dergisi

Turkish Journal of Pathology

Turkish Journal of Pathology

2011, Vol 27, Num, 2     (Pages: 149-153)

Diagnostic Value of Transbronchial Needle Aspiration Cytology in Sarcoidosis

İrem Hicran ÖZBUDAK 1, Gülay ÖZBİLİM 1, Ömer ÖZBUDAK 2, Tezay SANDIKLI KOVAN 2

1 Department of Pathology, Akdeniz University, Faculty of Medicine, ANTALYA, TURKEY
2 Department of Chest Diseases, Akdeniz University, Faculty of Medicine, ANTALYA, TURKEY

DOI: 10.5146/tjpath.2011.01064
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Summary

Objective: Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous inflammation that occurs as a result of disturbed immune regulation in individuals exposed to certain environmental agents. Although tissue sampling is considered the “gold standard” for the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, a medically treated disease, minimally invasive diagnostic methods are preferred instead of surgical tissue sampling. Transbronchial needle aspiration has been reported as an effective diagnostic method.

Material and Method: In this study, transbronchial needle aspiration cytology samples were assessed from 38 patients where sarcoidosis was suspected clinically and radiologically. The existence of epithelioid histiocytes and/or giant cells that formed granulomas was used as a cytological diagnostic criterion for chronic granulomatous inflammation. The presence of lymphocytes and/or germinal center cells, and of histiocytes in lymph nodes was regarded as adequate sampling criteria.

Results: A total of 31 out of the 38 patients were diagnosed as sarcoidosis with clinical, radiological and microbiological findings, after chronic granulomatous inflammation was considered by cytologic assessment. Cytologic diagnosis was achieved in: 4 of 7 patients with sampling from a single lymph node region, 25 of 28 patients with sampling from two different lymph node regions and 2 of 3 patients with sampling from three different lymph node regions. Two of the 7 patients who could not be diagnosed cytologically underwent a transbronchial parenchyma biopsy and the rest were diagnosed histologically from mediastinoscopic lymph node sampling.

Conclusion: We would like to emphasize that transbronchial needle aspiration is a successful diagnostic method. We highlighted the adequacy criteria of cytological sampling and the encountered cytological findings of chronic granulomatous inflammation.

Introduction

Sarcoidosis is a chronic, multisystemic, granulomatous disease of unknown etiology and usually presents with pulmonary and lymphatic system involvement[1]. It is characterized by non-caseating granulomas and multinuclear giant cells that usually accompany these lesions. It is thought to develop as a result of an immune regulation disorder following exposure to known environmental agents in genetically predisposed persons. The first clinical presentation of sarcoidosis depends on the organ involved. The diagnosis is made by the presence of a cytological or histological appearance of non-caseating granulomas in addition to the clinical and radiological findings and ruling out of other causes of granulomatous inflammation[2].

Sarcoidosis can be seen globally but its incidence varies between countries and ethnic groups. Its incidence is 40/100000 in Europe while it is rare in northeast Asia. It is more frequent in females and is usually seen before the age of 40 with a peak between 20 and 29[3].

The diagnosis of sarcoidosis requires the presence of granulomas in two or more organs and the lack of known agent or process that would cause a granulomatous reaction[4].

Microscopically, sarcoid granulomas are non-necrotic densely organized collections of epithelioid histiocytes. They generally contain giant cells and are surrounded by peripheral mantle leukocytes. They may contain nonspecific inclusions such as Schaumann's, asteroid and Hamazaki-Wesenberg bodies and birefringent crystals[5].

The need for cytological/pathological diagnosis is currently debated as more than 70% of sarcoidosis cases show spontaneous resolution. Sarcoidosis can be treated medically and minimal invasive diagnostic methods are therefore preferred although tissue sampling is the “Golden Standard” for diagnosis. Transbronchial fine needle aspiration cytology (TBFNAC) is suggested as an effective diagnostic method[6].

The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of mediastinal/hilar lymph node sampling by TBFNAC without tissue biopsy for sarcoidosis diagnosis.

Methods

We evaluated a total of 38 cases with a clinical or radiological suspicion of sarcoidosis in this study. The cases underwent fiberoptic bronchoscopy at the Akdeniz University Facuty of Medicine Pulmonary Disease Department and TBFNAC samples were obtained from the mediastinal and/or hilar lymph nodes using a 21-gauge Wang needle. Most of the material obtained from the patient was used for preparing direct smears besides the patient and these were sent to the Pathology Department after alcohol fixation. Some material was sent to microbiology for cultures. Smear preparations from the TBFNAC samples were stained with hematoxylin-eosin and evaluated with a dual head microscope by two pathologists. The cytological criteria for chronic granulomatous inflammation was the presence of epithelioid histiocytes and/or giant cells with granulomatous organization (Figure 1A-H)[7]. The presence of lymphocytes from the lymph node structure and/or cellular elements of germinal centers and sinus histiocytes was used as the criterion for adequate sampling.

Figure 1: Transbronchial fine needle aspiration cytology – Sarcoidosis; Granulomas consisting of epithelioid histiocytes, giant cells and lymphocytes, (H&E x50) (A-C); (x100) (D); (x200) (E,F). Giant cell formation containing asteroid body, (H&E x200) (G); (x630) (H).

Results

There were 24 (63.2%) females and 14 (36.8%) males. The mean age was 48.4 (27-74). The mean number of preparations from each case was 9 (6-15). 31 of the 38 cases (81.6%) received a diagnosis of non-necrotizing chronic granulomatous inflammation with the TBFNAC samples. The cases were accepted as “Sarcoidosis” if the microbiology material cultures sent at the same time were reported as negative and the clinical and radiological findings were consistent with the diagnosis. The lymph node sample was obtained from paratracheal in 35, subcarinal in 30, hilar in 6 and precarinal in 1 case (Table I). The diagnosis of chronic granulomatous inflammation was made in 4 of 7 cases where a single lymph node, 25 of 28 cases where two lymph nodes and 2 of 3 cases where three lymph nodes were sampled. The sampled lymph nodes were paratracheal in 6, subcarinal in 3, hilar in 2 and precarinal in 1 of the 7 cases where a cytological diagnosis could not be provided. Two cases underwent transbronchial parenchymal tissue biopsy and 5 cases mediastinoscopic lymph node sampling when the TBFNAC results were negative and a histopathological diagnosis of non-necrotizing chronic granulomatous inflammation was made.

Table I: The distribution of lymph nodes in the cases and the results of TBNA

Discussion

The TBFNA procedure can be easily performed in sarcoidosis cases with pulmonary and lymph node involvement, increasing the role of cytology in the diagnosis. Tambouret et al. have reported that the FNAC method is a good diagnostic method for sarcoidosis diagnosis when evaluated together with the clinical, radiological and laboratory data (8). The procedure is simple, safe and inexpensive and can easily be performed on a same-day basis. The result is also obtained quicker than with conventional histopathological evaluation.

The accuracy of the TBFNAC method in mediastinal/hilar sarcoidosis cases depends on the thickness of the needle, the ability of the bronchoscopist and the number of sampled lymph nodes. Obtaining samples from multiple lymph nodes is suggested for an accurate diagnosis. Hilar lymph nodes are involved most often but paratracheal lymph node enlargement is also frequently seen. No difference has been found between the paratracheal and hilar lymph nodes regarding adequacy of the TBFNA method[9]. A 90% success rate for sarcoidosis diagnosis has been reported for an 18-gauge needle as it is also possible to obtain a tissue biopsy in addition to cytological material depending on the length of the needle[10]. Only cytological material can be obtained when a 22-gauge needle is used[9] so there are reports that it can frequently be inadequate in making a diagnosis of granulomatous inflammation when the sampling is also not carried out properly. We used a 21-gauge needle and were able to make a diagnosis of chronic granulomatous inflammation in 31 out of 38 cases. The cases where a diagnosis could not be provided underwent mediastinoscopy / transbronchial parenchymal tissue biopsy and these tissue biopsies were reported as consistent with non-necrotizing chronic granulomatous inflammation.

The first step in evaluating the FNAB sample should be determining the adequacy of the sample. When there are no cytopathological findings of granulomatous reaction, the adequacy of the sample is determined according to the presence/amount of cellular elements of lymphoid tissue. However, there are widely differing opinions on what this amount should be. A previous study by Baker et al. has reported a negative predictive value of 78% for samples containing lymphocytes, decreasing to 36% for samples without lymphocytes[11]. Alsharif et al. have reported that the presence of a least 40 benign lymphocytes in a highpowered field in areas with the most cellularity on a smear preparation can be used as an adequacy criterion[12]. The same investigators have accepted samples as adequate when large groups of lymphocytes or pigmented macrophages were present or numerous macrophages loaded with anthracotic pigment could be seen. Our laboratory accepts the presence of dense lymphocytes in at least one area of smear preparation with a semiquantitative evaluation as a criterion for adequacy. We retrospectively evaluated our cases for this study and saw that the adequacy criteria specified in the Alsharif et al. study were met and concluded that using such a threshold value increased the reliability and reproducibility of the study[12].

Granulomas are defined as a variable-sized loose collection of non-pigmented epithelioid or spindle-like histiocytes[7]. They are generally accompanied by lymphocytes and more rarely by necrotic material. The epithelioid histiocytes that make up the granulomas are kidney-shaped, spindle-like cells with a folded or boomerang shaped nucleus, faintly stained cytoplasm and non-prominent cell borders. There may be multinuclear giant cells but these are generally rare. Necrosis is usually not seen on the background of the smear in sarcoidosis cases[13]. The granulomas described in this study also possess the described cytomorphological features.

The sarcoidosis diagnosis is usually made by demonstrating non-caseating granulomas on biopsy and excluding other granuloma causes in practice. The patients usually undergo transbronchial parenchymal tissue biopsy and one study has shown these biopsies to have a diagnostic adequacy of 70% with sensitivity increasing with higher number of samples[14]. Many studies have shown that the conventional TBFNAC method has similar adequacy rates, and there are reports of high sensitivity rates such as 90%[15-19]. The biggest advantage of TBFNAC method when compared with transbronchial parenchymal tissue biopsy method is that the morbidity rate is low and potential complications such as pneumothorax and bleeding are encountered less often.

The differential diagnosis of sarcoidosis includes infectious causes, mycobacterial and fungal infections in the first place. The patient's clinical, radiological and laboratory findings provide a guideline but it is suggested that part of the sample be sent for culture and special histochemical stains for patients coming from a region with a high incidence of mycobacterial infections or where fungal infections are encountered and also in immunosuppressed patients or those receiving chemotherapy[13]. Another condition that must be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of sarcoidosis is the possible presence of sarcoidlike granulomas in malignancies (especially non-small cell lung carcinomas, and lymphoid and germ cell tumors)[20-22]. It is thought that sarcoid-like granulomas seen in the lymph node represent a local T cell-mediated immune reaction against possible antigens or other factors released from the tumor tissue[23]. Sarcoidosis granulomas also contain B cells as a difference at the histopathological level[24].

In conclusion, this study's data and those already present in the literature indicate that TBFNAC is a successful diagnostic method for sarcoidosis. Defining a granuloma structure cytologically and determining the threshold lymphocyte count value in samples from the mediastinal/hilar lymph node increases the reliability and reproducibility of the method and also ensures standardization of cytological evaluation.

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Keywords : Sarcoidosis, Lymphadenopathy, Aspiration biopsy, Fine-needle