S. Zweizig et al., NEOPLASIA ASSOCIATED WITH ATYPICAL GLANDULAR CELLS OF UNDETERMINED SIGNIFICANCE ON CERVICAL CYTOLOGY, Gynecologic oncology, 65(2), 1997, pp. 314-318
The clinical importance of atypical glandular cells of undetermined si
gnificance (AGUS) on cervicovaginal smear has not been well defined. B
etween January 1990 and April 1996, 127 smears were reported as showin
g AGUS changes by the cytopathology division at the University of Mass
achusetts Medical Center. The medical records of these women were revi
ewed: 17 women were excluded because of previous hysterectomy or gynec
ologic cancer, 85 were biopsied, 16 were followed by repeat smears, an
d 9 were lost to follow-up. Forty-four women had negative biopsies or
cervicitis. There were 15 endometrial lesions: 10 hyperplasias (2 with
atypia) and 5 adenocarcinomas. Twenty-five women had cervix lesions i
ncluding 3 endocervical atypias, 12 low-grade cervical intraepithelial
neoplasia (GIN), 6 high-grade GIN, one adenocarcinoma in situ, and 3
invasive adenocarcinomas. One patient had ovarian cancer. Two of the 1
6 women followed by repeat pap smear eventually had a cancer diagnosis
: one with cervix cancer and one with colon cancer. We were unable to
identify a subgroup of women with AGUS who were at increased risk for
serious pathology when we compared multiple demographic variables, sym
ptoms, or the presence of coexistent squamous abnormalities on cervica
l cytology. The mean age of the 15 women with endometrial lesions was
59.9 years, which was significantly older than those patients with cer
vix lesions who had a mean age of 38.9 years. The presence of AGUS on
cervical cytology is a marker for significant gynecologic neoplasia an
d should be investigated with colposcopically directed biopsies, endoc
ervical curettage, and, in older women, endometrial biopsy. (C) 1997 A
cademic Press.