Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology (Sep 2024)

Predictive factors of frozen section in transoral microlaryngeal surgery for suspicious glottic lesions

  • Mateus Morais Aires,
  • Fábio Yukio Pereira I,
  • Camilla Diacópulos Silva,
  • José Eduardo de Sá Pedroso,
  • Noemi Grigoletto de Biase,
  • Leonardo Haddad

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 90, no. 5
p. 101434

Abstract

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Objective: Frozen biopsy may guide surgical intraoperative decisions. We evaluated the accuracy of frozen biopsy for diagnosing benign, dysplastic and malignant laryngeal lesions, compared to paraffin section (gold standard). Methods: Retrospective review of the charts of all patients presenting with laryngeal lesions suspicious of malignancy, who underwent laryngeal microsurgery with frozen biopsy in our institution, between 2015 and 2020. Results of frozen biopsy and paraffin section examinations were compared. Results: Among 113 samples of 89 patients, paraffin section diagnosed 23 benign, 31 dysplastic and 59 malignant lesions. The accuracy of the frozen biopsy in identifying dysplasia or malignancy was 80.5% (91/113), and greater for lesions >5 mm (78.8% × 51.5%; p = 0.009). The positive and negative predictive values, sensitivity and specificity were 95.9%, 51.3%, 78.9% and 86.9%, respectively. Conclusions: Frozen section is a reliable tool when malignancy is detected, but almost half of benign results exhibit dysplasia or malignancy in paraffin section. Other clinical parameters should be considered in intraoperative decisions to prevent undertreatment. Level of evidence: 4.

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