BACKGROUND: Valid and reliable diagnoses of disease are key both to meaningful epidemiologic and clinical investigations and to decision-making about appropriate treatment. One previous study highlighted the lack of precision in diagnosing primary brain tumors in a neuropathology referral practice. The current study explores diagnostic discrepancies in a population-based adult glioma series by hospital of origin, specialty training of the original diagnosing pathologist, and clinical significance. METHODS: To confirm patients' eligibility for the San Francisco Adult Glioma Study, the authors obtained participants' pathology specimens and conducted a uniform secondary neuropathology review. Eligible patients were all adults age 20 years or older newly diagnosed with glioma between August 1, 1991, and March 31, 1994, who resided in 1 of 6 San Francisco Bay Area counties. RESULTS: Overall, the original and secondary diagnoses were the same (concordant) for 352 (77%) of the 457 cases available for study. Twenty-six percent of the cases from community hospitals were discordant, compared with 12% of the cases from academic hospitals P= 0.004. Of the 105 discordant diagnoses, 17 (16%) were determined to be clinically significant, defined as a difference that could significantly alter patient management and/or prognosis. Sixteen of these 17 cases originated at community hospitals, and only 1 originated at a hospital with a neuropathologist. Based on the distribution of review diagnoses, subjects presenting at nonacademic hospitals were more likely than those presenting at academic hospitals to have glioblastoma (61% vs. 52%; P = 0.07). CONCLUSIONS: The percentage of cases with discrepant original and review diagnoses was higher among those originally diagnosed at community hospitals without a neuropathologist than among those originally diagnosed at an academic hospital with a neuropathologist. Clinically significant discrepancies were much more likely to have originated at a community hospital without a neuropathologist. These data highlight the importance of review of brain tumors by a neuropathologist prior to decision-making regarding treatment. A separate implication of this study is that glioma cases selected exclusively from academic or nonacademic institutions in a particular geographic area are unlikely to be representative of all cases occurring in that area.
BACKGROUND: Valid and reliable diagnoses of disease are key both to meaningful epidemiologic and clinical investigations and to decision-making about appropriate treatment. One previous study highlighted the lack of precision in diagnosing primary brain tumors in a neuropathology referral practice. The current study explores diagnostic discrepancies in a population-based adult glioma series by hospital of origin, specialty training of the original diagnosing pathologist, and clinical significance. METHODS: To confirm patients' eligibility for the San Francisco Adult Glioma Study, the authors obtained participants' pathology specimens and conducted a uniform secondary neuropathology review. Eligible patients were all adults age 20 years or older newly diagnosed with glioma between August 1, 1991, and March 31, 1994, who resided in 1 of 6 San Francisco Bay Area counties. RESULTS: Overall, the original and secondary diagnoses were the same (concordant) for 352 (77%) of the 457 cases available for study. Twenty-six percent of the cases from community hospitals were discordant, compared with 12% of the cases from academic hospitals P= 0.004. Of the 105 discordant diagnoses, 17 (16%) were determined to be clinically significant, defined as a difference that could significantly alter patient management and/or prognosis. Sixteen of these 17 cases originated at community hospitals, and only 1 originated at a hospital with a neuropathologist. Based on the distribution of review diagnoses, subjects presenting at nonacademic hospitals were more likely than those presenting at academic hospitals to have glioblastoma (61% vs. 52%; P = 0.07). CONCLUSIONS: The percentage of cases with discrepant original and review diagnoses was higher among those originally diagnosed at community hospitals without a neuropathologist than among those originally diagnosed at an academic hospital with a neuropathologist. Clinically significant discrepancies were much more likely to have originated at a community hospital without a neuropathologist. These data highlight the importance of review of brain tumors by a neuropathologist prior to decision-making regarding treatment. A separate implication of this study is that glioma cases selected exclusively from academic or nonacademic institutions in a particular geographic area are unlikely to be representative of all cases occurring in that area.
Authors: Melissa L Bondy; Michael E Scheurer; Beatrice Malmer; Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan; Faith G Davis; Dora Il'yasova; Carol Kruchko; Bridget J McCarthy; Preetha Rajaraman; Judith A Schwartzbaum; Siegal Sadetzki; Brigitte Schlehofer; Tarik Tihan; Joseph L Wiemels; Margaret Wrensch; Patricia A Buffler Journal: Cancer Date: 2008-10-01 Impact factor: 6.860
Authors: Quinn T Ostrom; Haley Gittleman; Carol Kruchko; David N Louis; Daniel J Brat; Mark R Gilbert; Valentina I Petkov; Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2016-07-14 Impact factor: 4.130
Authors: Quinn T Ostrom; Haley Gittleman; Peter Liao; Toni Vecchione-Koval; Yingli Wolinsky; Carol Kruchko; Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan Journal: Neuro Oncol Date: 2017-11-06 Impact factor: 12.300
Authors: C Leland Rogers; Arie Perry; Stephanie Pugh; Michael A Vogelbaum; David Brachman; William McMillan; Joseph Jenrette; Igor Barani; Dennis Shrieve; Andy Sloan; Joseph Bovi; Young Kwok; Stuart H Burri; Samuel T Chao; Aaron C Spalding; Mitchell S Anscher; Beatrice Bloom; Minesh Mehta Journal: Neuro Oncol Date: 2015-10-22 Impact factor: 12.300
Authors: Gerald N DeLorenze; Lucie McCoy; Ai-Lin Tsai; Charles P Quesenberry; Terri Rice; Dora Il'yasova; Margaret Wrensch Journal: BMC Cancer Date: 2010-05-19 Impact factor: 4.430