The Significance of Histology and Morphometry in Predicting Lymph Node Metastases in Patients with Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Vulva

1993 
Abstract The material consists of a series of 73 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva. The site and the size of the primary tumor and the histological status of the lymph nodes of the groin were known. Two pathologists evaluated nuclear hyperchromatism, nuclear polymorphism, histological differentiation, number of mitoses, inflammatory response, and vascular invasion and graded these parameters from one to three. The reliability of the histopathological grades evaluated by the κ coefficient showed considerable interobserver variation. Despite this a model which included the subjective parameter nuclear hyperchromatism could predict patients without lymph node metastases. The model consisted of patients with tumors which were not situated on the clitoris, were less than 40 mm in diameter, and exhibited only slight hyperchromatism. The model fitted 19 (26%) and 14 (19%) of the patients with two different pathologists evaluating the nuclear hyperchromatism and none of these patients had lymph node metastases. The quantitative parameter—mean nuclear volume—determined by morphometry was of no diagnostic value for the prediction of patients without groin node metastases at the time of operation.
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