Weber J E
Department of Statistics, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.
Anal Quant Cytol Histol. 1988 Feb;10(1):73-86.
Corresponding to the rapid increase in the amount of data available for use in clinical diagnoses, there is an increased need for procedures that can provide the diagnostician with meaningful statistical summaries of data and with statements concerning the statistical significance associated with a diagnostic evaluation. It has been demonstrated that multivariate statistical assessment of clinical material can provide consistent, reliable and highly sensitive diagnostic clues, even in instances in which trained personnel are unable to see any change. Several examples of applications of statistical analyses in diagnostic cytology and histopathology are given in this paper. The examples were chosen to be illustrative of the different types of problems for which statistical analyses have been found useful. These problems differ with respect to the extent of the statistical methods thus far developed and the difficulty involved in developing further analyses. For many problems, appropriate statistical analyses are readily available; other problems require definition of custom-made test statistics and, in some cases, also definition of new statistical distributions. The problems discussed here are only a small sample of the existing problems, but they provide at least an indication of the scope of the role that statistics plays in cytopathologic and histopathologic diagnosis.