The accuracy of intraoperative diagnoses based on examination of frozen sections. A prospective comparison with paraffin-embedded sections.

The accuracy of diagnoses based on examination of frozen sections was determined by comparing the results to those obtained by examination of tissues prepared using conventional methods (formalin fixation, paraffin-embedded tissue). One hundred ninety-four specimens were examined using the frozen section technique; 37 were examined to confirm a tentative diagnosis or to document lymph node metastasis and the remainder were examined to diagnose an unknown pathologic process. Of the 194 specimens examined, an accurate, specific diagnosis was obtained in 161 (83%); in 19 (10%), the pathologic process was correctly identified, but a specific diagnosis was not obtained; and in 2 (1%) the diagnosis was deferred. The remaining 12 (6%) were incorrectly diagnosed by the frozen section technique. When the number of specimens in which a specific diagnosis was obtained was combined with the number of specimens in which the pathologic process was correctly identified, the overall accuracy rate of the frozen section technique was 93%. There was no difference in the accuracy of the frozen section technique based on the reason for submission of the sample, source of tissue submitted, or the type of pathologic process (i.e., inflammatory or neoplastic). Of the 12 incorrect diagnoses, 4 (33%) were because of sampling errors and 8 (67%) were caused by interpretation errors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

[1]  R. Lattes,et al.  Frozen section experience in 3000 cases. Accuracy, limitations, and value in residency training. , 1968, American journal of clinical pathology.

[2]  B. Griffel,et al.  Frozen‐section diagnosis in surgical pathology. A prospective analysis of 526 frozen sections , 1986, Cancer.

[3]  J. Davies,et al.  Frozen section diagnosis: an audit. , 1985, Journal of clinical pathology.

[4]  Dahlin Dc Seventy-five years' experience with frozen sections at the Mayo Clinic. , 1980 .

[5]  E. Klatt,et al.  Accuracy of frozen-section diagnosis in a teaching hospital. , 1987, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[6]  M. Prey,et al.  Guidelines for practical utilization of intraoperative frozen sections. , 1989, Archives of surgery.

[7]  L. Ackerman,et al.  The indications for and limitations of frozen section diagnosis. A review of 1269 consecutive frozen section diagnoses , 1959, The British journal of surgery.

[8]  W. Holaday,et al.  Ten thousand consecutive frozen sections. A retrospective study focusing on accuracy and quality control. , 1974, American journal of clinical pathology.

[9]  J. Sawady,et al.  Accuracy of and reasons for frozen sections: a correlative, retrospective study. , 1988, Human pathology.

[10]  P J Howanitz,et al.  Interinstitutional comparison of frozen-section consultation. A College of American Pathologists Q-Probe study of 79,647 consultations in 297 North American institutions. , 1991, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[11]  R. Golouh,et al.  Accuracy of frozen section diagnosis in soft tissue tumors. , 1990, Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc.