The Open Breast Cancer Journal

2010, 2 : 81-89
Published online 2010 December 28. DOI: 10.2174/1876817201002011081
Publisher ID: TOBCANJ-2-81

Breast Cytology: Current Issues and Future Directions

Malini Harigopal and David C. Chhieng
Department of Pathology, Yale University, 430 Congress Avenue, New Haven, CT, USA.

ABSTRACT

Breast cytology, in particularly fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB), has been used for many years as a diagnostic tool for managing patients with breast lesions. In experienced hands, FNAB is highly sensitive and specific. Other benefits include its low cost, minimal invasiveness, and ability to provide same-day diagnosis. Despite all these benefits, FNAB has gradually been replaced by core needle biopsy (CNB) because of its high error rates when there is a lack of experienced cytopathologists, its inability to distinguish between invasive and in situ carcinoma, and most importantly, its inability to provide adequate and suitable materials for quantitative evaluation of HER2 and other prognostic markers. Other uses of breast cytology include touch preparation cytology for intraoperative evaluation of sentinel lymph nodes and surgical margins of lumpectomy specimens and for providing same-day diagnosis of CNB. In addition, breast cytology, such as ductal lavage and nipple fluid cytology, has also found applications in risk assessment for women at high risk for developing breast cancer. With the increased utilization of molecular technologies, genomic and proteomic studies have been successfully applied to breast cytologic preparations. It would not be far fetched to predict that in the very near future, the clinical application of molecular analyses will be routine ancillary testing in breast cytology, thus allowing early cancer detection, and improved tumor characterization as well as prediction of patients' outcomes and therapeutic responses.