Literature DB >> 19540562

Virtual slide telepathology for an academic teaching hospital surgical pathology quality assurance program.

Anna R Graham1, Achyut K Bhattacharyya, Katherine M Scott, Fangru Lian, Lauren L Grasso, Lynne C Richter, John B Carpenter, Sarah Chiang, Jeffrey T Henderson, Ana Maria Lopez, Gail P Barker, Ronald S Weinstein.   

Abstract

Virtual slide telepathology is an important potential tool for providing re-review of surgical pathology cases as part of a quality assurance program. The University of Arizona pathology faculty has implemented a quality assurance program between 2 university hospitals located 6 miles apart. The flagship hospital, University Medical Center (UMC), in Tucson, AZ, handles approximately 20 000 surgical pathology specimens per year. University Physicians Healthcare Hospital (UPHH) at Kino Campus has one tenth the volume of surgical pathology cases. Whereas UMC is staffed by 10 surgical pathologists, UPHH is staffed daily by a single part-time pathologist on a rotating basis. To provide same-day quality assurance re-reviews of cases, a DMetrix DX-40 ultrarapid virtual slide scanner (DMetrix, Inc, Tucson, AZ) was installed at the UPHH in 2005. Since then, glass slides of new cases of cancer and other difficult cases have been scanned the same day the slides are produced by the UPHH histology laboratory. The pathologist at UPHH generates a provisional written report based on light microscopic examination of the glass slides. At 2:00 pm each day, completed cases from UPHH are re-reviewed by staff pathologists, pathology residents, and medical students at the UMC using the DMetrix Iris virtual slide viewer. The virtual slides are viewed on a 50-in plasma monitor. Results are communicated with the UPHH laboratory by fax. We have analyzed the results of the first 329 consecutive quality assurance cases. There was complete concordance with the original UPHH diagnosis in 302 (91.8%) cases. There were 5 (1.5%) major discrepancies, which would have resulted in different therapy and/or management, and 10 (3.0%) minor discrepancies. In 6 cases (1.8%), the diagnosis was deferred for examination of the glass slides by the reviewing pathologists at UMC, and the diagnosis of another 6 (1.8%) cases were deferred pending additional testing, usually immunohistochemistry. Thus, the quality assurance program found a small number of significant diagnostic discrepancies. We also found that implementation of a virtual slide telepathology quality assurance service improved the job satisfaction of academic subspecialty pathologists assigned to cover on-site surgical pathology services at a small, affiliated university hospital on a rotating part-time basis. These findings should be applicable to some community hospital group practices as well.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19540562     DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2009.04.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Pathol        ISSN: 0046-8177            Impact factor:   3.466


  11 in total

Review 1.  The Empirical Foundations of Telepathology: Evidence of Feasibility and Intermediate Effects.

Authors:  Rashid L Bashshur; Elizabeth A Krupinski; Ronald S Weinstein; Matthew R Dunn; Noura Bashshur
Journal:  Telemed J E Health       Date:  2017-02-07       Impact factor: 3.536

2.  A nationwide telepathology consultation and quality control program in China: implementation and result analysis.

Authors:  Je Chen; Yahui Jiao; Chaohui Lu; Jun Zhou; Zongjiu Zhang; Chen Zhou
Journal:  Diagn Pathol       Date:  2014-12-19       Impact factor: 2.644

3.  Development and use of a genitourinary pathology digital teaching set for trainee education.

Authors:  Li Li; Bryan J Dangott; Anil V Parwani
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2010-05-26

4.  Validation of diagnostic accuracy using digital slides in routine histopathology.

Authors:  László Fónyad; Tibor Krenács; Péter Nagy; Attila Zalatnai; Judit Csomor; Zoltán Sápi; Judit Pápay; Júlia Schönléber; Csaba Diczházi; Béla Molnár
Journal:  Diagn Pathol       Date:  2012-03-31       Impact factor: 2.644

5.  Color standardization in whole slide imaging using a color calibration slide.

Authors:  Pinky A Bautista; Noriaki Hashimoto; Yukako Yagi
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2014-01-31

6.  Mouse cursor movement and eye tracking data as an indicator of pathologists' attention when viewing digital whole slide images.

Authors:  Vignesh Raghunath; Melissa O Braxton; Stephanie A Gagnon; Tad T Brunyé; Kimberly H Allison; Lisa M Reisch; Donald L Weaver; Joann G Elmore; Linda G Shapiro
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2012-12-20

7.  Application of whole slide image markup and annotation for pathologist knowledge capture.

Authors:  Walter S Campbell; Kirk W Foster; Steven H Hinrichs
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2013-02-28

8.  Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study.

Authors:  Beth L Braunhut; Anna R Graham; Fangru Lian; Phyllis D Webster; Elizabeth A Krupinski; Achyut K Bhattacharyya; Ronald S Weinstein
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2014-05-26

9.  Emerging paradigm of virtual-microscopy for histopathology diagnosis: survey of US and Canadian oral pathology trainees.

Authors:  Ngozi N Nwizu; Adepitan Owosho; Kalu U E Ogbureke
Journal:  BDJ Open       Date:  2017-07-28

10.  Utility of telepathology as a consultation tool between an off-site surgical pathology suite and affiliated hospitals in the frozen section diagnosis of lung neoplasms.

Authors:  Taisia Vitkovski; Tawfiqul Bhuiya; Michael Esposito
Journal:  J Pathol Inform       Date:  2015-10-28
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