| Literature DB >> 31637244 |
Yu Ting Huang1, Salvatore Lorenzo Renne1, Mauro Sollai1, Domenico Damiani1, Paola Bossi1, Emanuela Morenghi2, Massimo Roncalli1,3, Luca Di Tommaso1,3.
Abstract
Background: The imbalance between the increasing demand of highly specialized service and the reduction of specialists able to release this service is a global challenge for Pathology. This situation applies also to the setting of intra-operatory diagnostic: here the broad presence of Surgical divisions contrasts with the contraction of Pathology departments, progressively concentrated in few hospitals. The use of e-pathology device, such as remote-control microscopes, offers a possible solution to this imbalance. Aim: To prove the non-inferiority of function of a remote-control, real-time microscope named Nano-Eye Device (NED) with the optical microscope (OM) for intra-operatory histological diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: e-pathology; frozen section; microscope; real-time; telepathology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31637244 PMCID: PMC6788327 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2019.00215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Distribution of cases by body site, discovery phase.
| Appendix−1 (<1%) | Esophagus−2 (<1%) | Pancreas−14 (~6%) | Soft tissue−8 (~3%) |
TAT of OM and NED by chronological age of pathologists, discovery phase.
| OM (sec) | 27.8 ± 15.8 | 69.3 ± 66 | 21.3 ± 16.8 | 34.8 ± 19.2 | 33.1 ± 21.6 |
| NED (sec) | 167.2 ± 97.2 | 149.2 ± 111.8 | 74.2 ± 53.9 | 68.8 ± 46.7 | 106.9 ± 82.3 |
A to E, pathologists involved in the study; TAT, turn around time; yrs, years; OM, optical microscope; NED, nano eye device; sec, seconds.
Figure 1(A) Discovery phase, turn-around-time performance of the most common type of specimen, i.e., prostatic margin, using NED. In this figure, every single dot represents the mean TAT of each time of use, considering all the pathologists involved. The first dot represents the mean of the TAT of all five pathologists the first time they saw a prostate specimen; the last dot represents the mean of the TAT of the pathologists (two) the 20th time they saw at a prostate specimen. All the pathologists looked to prostatic specimen at least 10 times (the 10th dot shows the mean of TAT of five pathologists). (B,C) Discovery phase, the best (B) and worst (C) turn-around-time performance for all type of cases, using NED. In this figure and in the followings (D,E) every dot represent a single case seen by a single pathologist. (D) Turn-around-time performance at the end of the study, same pathologist shown in (B). (E) Turn-around-time performance at the end of the study, same pathologist shown in (C).
Distribution of cases by body site, validation phase.
| Breast−13 (~7%) | Pancreas−10 (~5%) | Tongue−4 (~2%) |
TAT of NED by degree of difficulty, comparison between the discovery and the validation phases.
| Difficult specimen | 163.1 ± 111 | 143 ± 105.5 |
| Easy specimen | 100.8 ± 80 | 81.6 ± 78.4 |
sec, seconds.
TAT of NED by chronological age of pathologists, comparison between the discovery and the validation phases.
| Discovery phase | 167.2 ± 97.2 | 149.2 ± 111.8 | 74.2 ± 53.9 | 68.8 ± 46.7 | 106.9 ± 82.3 |
| Validation phase | 106.9 ± 35.3 | 126 ± 90 | 102 ± 144.4 | 68.4 ± 56 | 38.2 ± 19 |
A to E, pathologists involved in the study; yrs, years; sec, seconds.