Reactive and Reparative Changes Mimicking Dysplasia: A Gynecologic Cytopathology Case Report

Authors

  • Mahmoud A. Aloriby Department of Pathology, University Medical center, Libyan International Medical University, Benghazi,Libya Author
  • Yousef M Ali Hasen Department of Pathology, University Medical center, Libyan International Medical University, Benghazi,Libya Author
  • Bushra Mofadal Department of Histopathology and Cytology, Faculty of Medical Laboratories, Omdurman Islamic University, Khartoum, Sudan Author
  • Samhar Montaser Department of Pathology, University Medical center, Libyan International Medical University, Benghazi,Libya Author
  • Ahmed A. Alhaddad Department of Cytotechnology, Faculty of Biomedical Science, Benghazi, Libya Author
  • Aboubak A. Al –Abraheem Department of Cytotechnology, Faculty of Biomedical Science, Benghazi, Libya Author
  • Ahmed S. Mikael Research Centre, Libyan International University, Libya Author
  • Hossin mosalm Department of Gynecology, Qurina clinic, Benghazi,Libya Author
  • Aziza S. Elgathfy Department of Gynecology, Qurina clinic, Benghazi,Libya Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54361/LJMR.20.2.41

Keywords:

Cervical cytology, Endocervical glandular atypia, Reactive changes, Repair Endocervical, Pap smear

Abstract

Background: Reactive and reparative endocervical changes may closely resemble dysplasia or glandular neoplasia, creating potential diagnostic challenges. Cervical cytology is a key component of cervical cancer screening.Methods: A 42-year-old woman undergoing a routine cervical cancer screening is the subject of our descriptive gynecologic cytopathology case. Cytomorphological results were interpreted in relation to clinical data after a traditional Papanicolaou smear was examined. Since this is a single case report, no statistical analysis was done. Reactive squamous and endocervical cells with smooth nuclear contours, finely granular chromatin, mild nuclear enlargement, and occasionally prominent nucleoli were seen in the Pap smear. Mucus and inflammation were visible in the background. Preserved nuclear polarity, the lack of coarse chromatin or aberrant mitotic activity, and benign clinical findings supported a reactive and restorative process despite early concerns about glandular atypia. Malignancy or intraepithelial lesions were not found in the final diagnosis. Conclusions: In cervical cytology, reactive and reparative atypia may resemble dysplastic or neoplastic alterations. To prevent overdiagnosis and needless interventions, careful cytomorphological evaluation in conjunction with clinicopathological correlation is crucial.

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References

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Published

10-05-2026

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How to Cite

1.
Aloriby M, Hasen Y, Mofadal B, Montaser S, Alhaddad A, . Al –Abraheem A, et al. Reactive and Reparative Changes Mimicking Dysplasia: A Gynecologic Cytopathology Case Report. LJMR [Internet]. 2026 May 10 [cited 2026 May 11];20(2):255-8. Available from: https://ljmr.ly/index.php/ljmr/article/view/553

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