https://www.selleckchem.com/products/A-966492.html Few cytological reports have described small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNEC) in the female genital tract. In the present study, we describe a cytological case of SCNEC accompanied by adenocarcinoma, as well as high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL). A Japanese woman (42 years old) presented with abnormal genital bleeding. A conventional Papanicolaou smear revealed an inflammatory condition with three neoplastic components SCNEC as irregular aggregates of neoplastic small round cells with nuclear molding and granular chromatin; adenocarcinoma as columnar cell clusters with peripherally located large nuclei, and HSIL as sheets or clusters of dysplastic basal-type squamous cells with irregular hyperchromatic nuclei. Accordingly, a cytodiagnosis of SCNEC with adenocarcinoma and HSIL was made. Owing to the rarity of cervical SCNEC, cytological diagnosis may be difficult. Due to its aggressive clinical behavior, the presence of an SCNEC component should be verified in any cytodiagnosis of adenocarcinoma or HSIL. To identify the degree of concordance and characterize demographic and clinical differences between commonly used definitions of multisystem medical complexity in children hospitalized in children's hospitals. We conducted a retrospective, cross-sectional cohort study of children <21 years of age hospitalized at 47 US Pediatric Health Information System-participating children's hospitals between January 2017 to December 2019. We classified patients as having multisystem complexity when using 3 definitions of medical complexity (pediatric complex chronic conditions, pediatric medical complexity algorithm, and pediatric chronic critical illness) and assessed their overlap. We compared demographic, clinical, outcome, cost characteristics, and longitudinal healthcare utilization for each grouping. Nearly one-fourth (23.5%) of children hospitalized at Pediatric Health Information System-participating i