LaCasce Ann S, Kho Michelle E, Friedberg Jonathan W, Niland Joyce C, Abel Gregory A, Rodriguez Maria Alma, Czuczman Myron S, Millenson Michael M, Zelenetz Andrew D, Weeks Jane C
Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2008 Nov 1;26(31):5107-12. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2008.16.4061. Epub 2008 Sep 2.
Before the implementation of the WHO lymphoma classification system, disagreement about pathologic diagnosis was common. We sought to estimate the impact of expert review in the modern era by comparing final pathologic diagnoses at five comprehensive cancer centers with diagnoses assigned at referring centers.
Patients in the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) database with a documented pathologic diagnosis before presentation and a final pathologic diagnosis of any of five common B-cell NHLs were eligible. After central review of discordant cases, we estimated the rate of pathologic concordance, then investigated the etiology of discordance as well its potential impact on prognosis and treatment.
The overall pathologic discordance rate was 6% (43 of 731 patients; 95% CI, 4% to 8%). For the majority of cases in which the referring diagnosis was apparently final, no additional studies were conducted at the NCCN center, and the change in diagnosis reflected a different interpretation of existing data. Concordance was highest for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (95%) and follicular lymphoma (FL; grades 1, 2, and not otherwise specified, 95%) and lowest for grade 3 FL (88%). Of the 43 pathologically discordant cases, 81% (35 patients) might have experienced a change in treatment as a result of the pathologic reclassification.
In the era of the WHO lymphoma classification system, the majority of common B-cell NHLs diagnosed in the community were unchanged by second opinion review by an expert hematopathologist. However, for one patient in 20, there was a discordance in diagnosis that could have altered therapy.
在世界卫生组织淋巴瘤分类系统实施之前,病理诊断方面的分歧很常见。我们试图通过比较五个综合癌症中心的最终病理诊断与转诊中心给出的诊断,来评估现代专家评审的影响。
符合条件的患者来自国家综合癌症网络(NCCN)非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)数据库,这些患者在就诊前有记录的病理诊断,且最终病理诊断为五种常见B细胞NHL中的任何一种。在对不一致的病例进行集中评审后,我们估计了病理一致性的比例,然后调查了不一致的病因及其对预后和治疗的潜在影响。
总体病理不一致率为6%(731例患者中有43例;95%可信区间,4%至8%)。对于大多数转诊诊断看似最终诊断的病例,NCCN中心未进行额外研究,诊断的改变反映了对现有数据的不同解读。弥漫性大B细胞淋巴瘤(95%)和滤泡性淋巴瘤(FL;1级、2级及未另行指定的,95%)的一致性最高,3级FL的一致性最低(88%)。在43例病理不一致的病例中,81%(35例患者)可能因病理重新分类而经历治疗改变。
在世卫组织淋巴瘤分类系统时代,社区诊断的大多数常见B细胞NHL经血液病理专家的二次意见评审后诊断未变。然而,每20例患者中就有1例存在可能改变治疗的诊断不一致情况。