Literature DB >> 12436443

Pathologic review of the Mayo Lung Project cancers [corrected]. Is there a case for misdiagnosis or overdiagnosis of lung carcinoma in the screened group?

Thomas V Colby1, Henry D Tazelaar, William D Travis, Erik J Bergstralh, James R Jett.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the Mayo Lung Project Screening Trial, there were more carcinomas identified in the screened group compared with the control group. The screened group had better survival, but there was no difference in lung carcinoma mortality between the screened group and the control group. The purpose of this study was to review all available original pathology from the trial to determine whether overdiagnosis (carcinomas that do not result in the death of the patient) or misdiagnosis of lung carcinoma may explain this discrepancy.
METHODS: All available lung pathology slides from patients who underwent surgery at the Mayo Clinic were reviewed independently by three blinded lung pathologists. Tumors were classified according to the 1999 World Health Organization criteria. In addition, agreement among the pathologists was assessed.
RESULTS: Among 106 patients who underwent surgery at the Mayo Clinic, slides were available for review from 105 patients, including 77 slides from the screened group and 28 slides from the control group. The original diagnosis of carcinoma was confirmed in all patients. In 7 patients (6.7%), there was unanimous agreement that the lesion was preinvasive (carcinoma in situ), and these lesions all were from the screened group. In 90 patients (85.5%), there was unanimous agreement that the tumors were invasive. In 8 patients (7.8%), there was some disagreement between the observers about whether lesions were invasive or preinvasive; 7 of these 8 lesions were from the screened group. The level of agreement among pathologists for invasive carcinomas was > 94% for all comparisons, and the kappa statistic ranged from 0.67 (substantial agreement) to 0.84 (almost perfect agreement). There was good agreement among the pathologists about tumor cell type with the kappa statistic >/= 0.65.
CONCLUSIONS: The histologic diagnosis of carcinoma was confirmed for all 105 slides that were reviewed. The results of this study indicate that misdiagnosis does not explain the increased numbers of carcinomas identified in the screened group. The increased numbers of in situ carcinomas in the screened group resulted in increased numbers of squamous carcinomas in the screened group compared with the control group and may have contributed to the better survival. It is possible that carcinoma in situ accounted for some instances of overdiagnosis. Copyright 2002 American Cancer Society.DOI 10.1002/cncr.10930

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12436443     DOI: 10.1002/cncr.10930

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  5 in total

1.  Inter-observer variation between pathologists in diffuse parenchymal lung disease.

Authors:  A G Nicholson; B J Addis; H Bharucha; C A Clelland; B Corrin; A R Gibbs; P S Hasleton; K M Kerr; N B N Ibrahim; S Stewart; W A H Wallace; A U Wells
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 9.139

2.  Modeling excess lung cancer risk among screened arm participants in the Mayo Lung Project.

Authors:  Deborah L Goldwasser; Marek Kimmel
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2010-01-01       Impact factor: 6.860

3.  Validation of interobserver agreement in lung cancer assessment: hematoxylin-eosin diagnostic reproducibility for non-small cell lung cancer: the 2004 World Health Organization classification and therapeutically relevant subsets.

Authors:  Juneko E Grilley-Olson; D Neil Hayes; Dominic T Moore; Kevin O Leslie; Matthew D Wilkerson; Bahjat F Qaqish; Michele C Hayward; Christopher R Cabanski; Xiaoying Yin; Mark A Socinski; Thomas E Stinchcombe; Leigh B Thorne; Timothy Craig Allen; Peter M Banks; Mary B Beasley; Alain C Borczuk; Philip T Cagle; Rebecca Christensen; Thomas V Colby; Georgean G Deblois; Göran Elmberger; Paolo Graziano; Craig F Hart; Kirk D Jones; Diane M Maia; C Ryan Miller; Keith V Nance; William D Travis; William K Funkhouser
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  2012-05-14       Impact factor: 5.534

4.  A deep learning model for the classification of indeterminate lung carcinoma in biopsy whole slide images.

Authors:  Fahdi Kanavati; Gouji Toyokawa; Seiya Momosaki; Hiroaki Takeoka; Masaki Okamoto; Koji Yamazaki; Sadanori Takeo; Osamu Iizuka; Masayuki Tsuneki
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-04-14       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Hyper-phosphorylation of Rb S249 together with CDK5R2/p39 overexpression are associated with impaired cell adhesion and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition: Implications as a potential lung cancer grading and staging biomarker.

Authors:  Jaileene Pérez-Morales; Darielys Mejías-Morales; Stephanie Rivera-Rivera; Jonathan González-Flores; Mónica González-Loperena; Fernando Y Cordero-Báez; Wilfredo M Pedreira-García; Camille Chardón-Colón; Jennifer Cabán-Rivera; W Douglas Cress; Edna R Gordian; Teresita Muñoz-Antonia; Mauricio Cabrera-Ríos; Angel Isidro; Domenico Coppola; Marilin Rosa; Theresa A Boyle; Victoria Izumi; John M Koomen; Pedro G Santiago-Cardona
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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