Weinstein Ronald S, Holcomb Michael J, Krupinski Elizabeth A
Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
J Pathol Inform. 2019 Jan 24;10:1. doi: 10.4103/jpi.jpi_71_18. eCollection 2019.
This narrative-based paper provides a first-person account of the early history of telepathology (1985-2000) by the field's inventor, Ronald S. Weinstein, M. D. During the 1980s, Dr. Weinstein, a Massachusetts General Hospital-trained pathologist, was director of the Central Pathology Laboratory (CPL) for the National Cancer Institute-funded National Bladder Cancer Project, located at Rush Medical College in Chicago, IL. The CPL did post therapy revalidations of surgical pathology and cytopathology diagnoses before outcomes of the completed clinical trials were published. The CPL reported that interobserver variability was invalidating inclusion of dozens of treated bladder cancer patients in published reports on treatment outcomes. This problem seemed ripe for a technology-assisted solution. In an effort to solve the interobserver variability problem, Dr. Weinstein devised a novel solution, dynamic-robotic telepathology, that would potentially enable CPL uropathologists to consult on distant uropathology cases in real-time before their assignment to urinary bladder cancer, tumor stage, and grade-specific clinical trials. During the same period, universities were ramping up their support for faculty entrepreneurism and creating in-house technology transfer organizations. Dr. Weinstein recognized telepathology as a potential growth industry. He and his sister, Beth Newburger, were a successful brother-sister entrepreneur team. Their PC-based education software business, OWLCAT™, had just been acquired by Digital Research Inc., a leading software company, located in California. With funding from the COMSAT Corporation, a publically traded satellite communications company, the Weinstein-Newburger team brought the earliest dynamic-robotic telepathology systems to market. Dynamic-robotic telepathology became a dominant telepathology technology in the late 1990s. Dr. Weinstein, a serial entrepreneur, continued to innovate and, with a team of optical scientists at The University of Arizona's College of Optical Sciences, developed the first sub-1-min whole-slide imaging system, the DMetrix DX-40 scanner, in the early 2000s.
这篇基于叙述的论文由远程病理学领域的发明者罗纳德·S·温斯坦医学博士提供了对远程病理学早期历史(1985 - 2000年)的第一人称叙述。在20世纪80年代,曾在马萨诸塞州总医院接受培训的温斯坦博士是位于伊利诺伊州芝加哥拉什医学院的国家癌症研究所资助的国家膀胱癌项目中央病理学实验室(CPL)的主任。CPL在已完成的临床试验结果发表之前,对手术病理学和细胞病理学诊断进行治疗后重新验证。CPL报告称,观察者间的差异使得在已发表的治疗结果报告中纳入数十名接受治疗的膀胱癌患者无效。这个问题似乎很适合用技术辅助解决方案来解决。为了解决观察者间差异问题,温斯坦博士设计了一种新颖的解决方案,即动态机器人远程病理学,这有可能使CPL泌尿病理学家能够在将远处的泌尿病理学病例分配到膀胱癌、肿瘤分期和分级特异性临床试验之前实时进行会诊。同一时期,各大学加大了对教师创业的支持力度,并创建了内部技术转让组织。温斯坦博士认识到远程病理学是一个潜在的增长行业。他和他的妹妹贝丝·纽伯格是一对成功的兄妹创业团队。他们基于个人电脑的教育软件业务OWLCAT™刚刚被位于加利福尼亚州的领先软件公司数字研究公司收购。在一家公开上市的卫星通信公司COMSAT公司的资助下,温斯坦 - 纽伯格团队将最早的动态机器人远程病理学系统推向市场。动态机器人远程病理学在20世纪90年代后期成为主导的远程病理学技术。作为连续创业者的温斯坦博士继续创新,并在21世纪初与亚利桑那大学光学科学学院的一组光学科学家合作,开发了第一台不到1分钟的全切片成像系统,即DMetrix DX - 40扫描仪。