Objective: To determine the accuracy of comparative cytologic and frozen section intraoperative diagnosis in neuropathology and the relevance of diagnostic accuracy during both craniotomic and stereotactic biopsies and to provide further data on rare and/or diagnostically controversial lesions.
Study design: Both cytologic and frozen section preparations were employed in the intraoperative diagnosis of 85 consecutive central and peripheral nervous system lesions obtained from classical surgery (70 samples, 4 of which were intramedullary) and stereotactic biopsies (15 samples).
Results: Combining cytologic and frozen section details allowed a fair diagnosis in 81 cases (95.29%), confirmed on paraffin sections. In the remaining cases intraoperative misdiagnosis was due to technical-staining defects (1 case); absence of tumor differentiation, resolved only by ultrastructural examination (2 cases); and marked tumor heterogeneity, resolved by wide tissue sampling and immunohistochemistry (1 case).
Conclusion: Besides providing a general description of cytologic and frozen section criteria useful in intraoperative diagnostic neuropathology and adding further details about some problematic and/or rare entities, our work confirmed: (1) the usefulness of comparative cytologic and frozen section examination in the intraoperative diagnosis of central nervous system lesions, (2) the relevance of the accuracy of intraoperative diagnosis during both craniotomy and stereotaxis, including intramedullary samples; and (3) the importance of fair "conduct" in intraoperative neuropathology, always comparatively considering morphologic and clinicoradiologic data.