Investigator

Yongsang Park

Resident Physician · University of Virginia Health System, Pathology

YPYongsang Park
Papers(1)
Cervical cytology in …
Collaborators(2)
Anne M. MillsMegan E. Dibbern
Institutions(2)
University Of Virgini…University of Virginia

Papers

Cervical cytology in endometrial cancer patients with Lynch syndrome: opportunities for early detection and limitations

Timely detection of endometrial carcinoma in Lynch syndrome patients ensures prompt treatment and appropriate cancer screening for the patient and impacted family members. While cervical cytology is utilized primarily in cervical cancer screening, endometrial glandular abnormalities can be identified as part of routine cervical cancer screening or during work-up for abnormal uterine bleeding. We retrospectively evaluated cervical cytology samples from Lynch syndrome patients with endometrial carcinoma to determine how often atypical/malignant glandular cells were identified on prior/concurrent cytology. We identified 14 Lynch syndrome patients with cervical cytology available within a year of endometrial carcinoma diagnosis. The average patient age was 55 years (36-73). Cervical cytology preceded diagnostic biopsy in 57% and was concurrent in 43%. A glandular abnormality was identified on original diagnosis in 43% and ranged from atypical glandular cells (AGC), not otherwise specified to adenocarcinoma consistent with endometrial primary. In 4 cases, abnormal cervical cytology triggered the subsequent biopsy. Evaluation of 8 cases with accessible cytology slides revealed 2 previously unrecognized glandular abnormalities, leading to an abnormal rate of 63% among cases reviewed retrospectively and a final glandular abnormality detection rate of 57% based on either original or review diagnosis. In summary, abnormal glandular cells were commonly identified in endometrial cancer patients with Lynch syndrome and led to endometrial cancer work-up and diagnosis in a subset. These results suggest that cervical cytology may have utility in endometrial cancer screening in this population and indicate that awareness of the patient's familial cancer risk is important for maximizing sensitivity of this test. They also caution against primary human papillomavirus screening in the Lynch syndrome population, as this may result in missed opportunities for early endometrial carcinoma detection among these high-risk individuals.

1Works
1Papers
2Collaborators

Positions

2020–

Resident Physician

University of Virginia Health System · Pathology

Education

2019

Doctor of Medicine (MD)

University of Virginia · School of Medicine

2013

Bachelor of Arts (BA)

University of Virginia · College of Arts & Sciences