Literature DB >> 12766585

International variation in histologic grading is large, and persistent feedback does not improve reproducibility.

Peter N Furness1, Nicholas Taub, Karel J M Assmann, Giovanni Banfi, Jean-Pierre Cosyns, Anthony M Dorman, Claire M Hill, Silke K Kapper, Rudiger Waldherr, Aryvdas Laurinavicius, Niels Marcussen, Anna Paula Martins, Malfada Nogueira, Heinz Regele, Daniel Seron, Marta Carrera, Ståle Sund, Eero I Taskinen, Timo Paavonen, Tatjana Tihomirova, Rafail Rosenthal.   

Abstract

Histologic grading systems are used to guide diagnosis, therapy, and audit on an international basis. The reproducibility of grading systems is usually tested within small groups of pathologists who have previously worked or trained together. This may underestimate the international variation of scoring systems. We therefore evaluated the reproducibility of an established system, the Banff classification of renal allograft pathology, throughout Europe. We also sought to improve reproducibility by providing individual feedback after each of 14 small groups of cases. Kappa values for all features studied were lower than any previously published, confirming that international variation is greater than interobserver variation as previously assessed. A prolonged attempt to improve reproducibility, using numeric or graphical feedback, failed to produce any detectable improvement. We then asked participants to grade selected photographs, to eliminate variation induced by pathologists viewing different areas of the slide. This produced improved kappa values only for some features. Improvement was influenced by the nature of the grade definitions. Definitions based on "area affected" by a process were not improved. The results indicate the danger of basing decisions on grading systems that may be applied very differently in different institutions.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12766585     DOI: 10.1097/00000478-200306000-00012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol        ISSN: 0147-5185            Impact factor:   6.394


  50 in total

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Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2014-11-06       Impact factor: 10.121

Review 4.  The Revisited Classification of GN in SLE at 10 Years: Time to Re-Evaluate Histopathologic Lesions.

Authors:  Suzanne Wilhelmus; Charles E Alpers; H Terence Cook; Franco Ferrario; Agnes B Fogo; Mark Haas; Kensuke Joh; Laure-Hélène Noël; Surya V Seshan; Jan A Bruijn; Ingeborg M Bajema
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Authors:  Vikas R Dharnidharka; Andrew Malone
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6.  Assessing rejection-related disease in kidney transplant biopsies based on archetypal analysis of molecular phenotypes.

Authors:  Jeff Reeve; Georg A Böhmig; Farsad Eskandary; Gunilla Einecke; Carmen Lefaucheur; Alexandre Loupy; Philip F Halloran
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Review 7.  Single-cell Transcriptomics and Solid Organ Transplantation.

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8.  Banff Initiative for Quality Assurance in Transplantation (BIFQUIT): reproducibility of polyomavirus immunohistochemistry in kidney allografts.

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9.  Development of CD3 cell quantitation algorithms for renal allograft biopsy rejection assessment utilizing open source image analysis software.

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10.  A gene expression profile for detection of sufficient tumour cells in breast tumour tissue: microarray diagnosis eligibility.

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