| Literature DB >> 31741668 |
Rania Bakkar1, James Mirocha2, Xuemo Fan1, David P Frishberg1, Mariza de Peralta-Venturina1, Jing Zhai1, Shikha Bose1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Paris System (TPS) acknowledges the need for more standardized terminology for reporting urine cytopathology results and minimizing the use of equivocal terms. We apply TPS diagnostic terminologies to assess interobserver agreement, compare TPS with the traditional method (TM) of reporting urine cytopathology, and evaluate the rate and positive predictive value (PPV) of each TPS diagnostic category. A survey is conducted at the end of the study.Entities:
Keywords: Atypical urothelial cells; The Paris System; classification systems for reporting urine cytopathology; interobserver agreement; urine; urine cytology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31741668 PMCID: PMC6826565 DOI: 10.4103/cytojournal.cytojournal_30_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytojournal ISSN: 1742-6413 Impact factor: 2.091
Figure 1The Paris System categories. Negative for high-grade urothelial carcinoma (a), atypical urothelial cells (b), suspicious for high-grade urothelial carcinoma (c), and high-grade urothelial carcinoma (d)
The Paris System overall kappa value and kappa value by diagnostic category
| NHGUC | 0.483 |
| AUC | 0.178 |
| SHGUC | 0.258 |
| HGUC | 0.520 |
| Overall | 0.362 |
| Overall after combining SHGUC and HGUC | 0.411 |
*Kappa values are statistically significant (P<0.0001) for overall kappa, NHGUC and HGUC categories. HGUC: High-grade urothelial carcinoma, NHGUC: Negative for HGUC, AUC: Atypical urothelial cell, SHGUC: Suspicious for HGUC, TPS: The Paris System
The Paris System compared to the traditional method for interpreting urine cytology
| Sensitivity | 23/53 (43) | 20/53 (38) |
| Specificity | 47/47 (100) | 47/47 (100) |
| PPV | 23/23 (100) | 19/19 (100) |
| NPV | 47/77 (61) | 47/81 (58) |
| Accuracy | 70/100 (70) | 66/100 (66) |
| The detection rate of biopsy-proven HGUC | 23/53 (43) | 30/53 (57) |
HGUC: High-grade urothelial carcinoma, PPV: Positive predictive value, NPV: Negative predictive value, TPS: The Paris System, TM: Traditional method
The Paris System and the traditional method compared to the surgical biopsy (clinical outcome) results for each category
| NHGUC | 16 (30) | 4 (15) | 38 (70) | 22 (85) |
| AUC | 14 (61) | 19 (43) | 9 (39) | 25 (57) |
| SHGUC | 9 (100) | 11 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| HGUC | 14 (100) | 19 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
HGUC: High-grade urothelial carcinoma, TPS: The Paris System, TM: Traditional method, NHGUC: Negative for HGUC, AUC: Atypical urothelial cell, SHGUC: Suspicious for HGUC
Distribution of cases in each diagnostic category applied by The Paris System compared to those used by the traditional method
| NHGUC ( | 25/54 (46) | 28/54 (52) | 1/54 (2) | 0/54 (0) |
| AUC ( | 1/23 (4) | 15/23 (65) | 3/23 (13) | 4/23 (17) |
| SHGUC ( | 0 | 1/9 (11) | 5/9 (56) | 3/9 (33) |
| HGUC ( | 0 | 0 | 2/14 (14) | 12/14 (86) |
HGUC: High-grade urothelial carcinoma, NHGUC: Negative for HGUC, AUC: Atypical urothelial cell, SHGUC: Suspicious for HGUC, TPS: The Paris System, TM: Traditional method
Figure 2Focal subtle atypia in biopsy-proven high-grade urothelial carcinoma cases with initial negative high-grade urothelial carcinoma, (a) acute inflammation, crystals, reactive cells (curved arrow). Nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio >0.5, hyperchromasia, membrane irregularity (arrow), (b) acute inflammation, reactive cells (curved arrow). Nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio >0.5, hyperchromasia, nuclear membrane irregularity (arrow), (c) nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio >0.5, nuclear irregularity (arrow). Enlarged nuclei, membrane irregularity, nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio <0.5 (arrowhead), and (d) crystals, acute inflammation, nuclear hyperchromasia, irregularity (arrow). Degenerated cells with irregular nuclei, nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio ≤ 0.5 (arrowhead)
Figure 3Biopsy-proven high-grade urothelial carcinoma not meeting required criteria by The Paris System of nuclear–cytoplasmic ratio >0.7 (a) and severe nuclear hyperchromasia (b)
Sample survey questionnaire and responses
| 1. Rate how helpful the diagnostic criteria proposed by TPS for considering the diagnosis of NHGUC? | 67% found criteria for reactive, lithiasis and therapy changes helpful |
| 2. Rate how helpful the diagnostic criteria proposed by TPS for making the diagnosis of AUC? | 17% found N/C ratio criterion helpful |
| 3. Rate how helpful the diagnostic criteria proposed by TPS for considering the diagnosis of LGUN? | 17% found the 3D clusters and the nuclear membrane irregularity criteria helpful |
| 4. Rate how helpful the diagnostic criteria proposed by TPS for making the diagnosis of SHGUC and HGUC? | 50% found N/C ratio and 5-10 cell cutoff criteria helpful |
| 5. Rate your overall satisfaction with the diagnostic criteria proposed by TPS | 33% overall satisfaction |
| 6. Do you feel the TPS has influenced you to change your urine cytology practice or improve your diagnostic skills (yes or no)? Why? | 67% reported “Yes” (more confidence in calling negative and decreased rate of atypical) |
HGUC: High-grade urothelial carcinoma, TPS: The Paris System, NHGUC: Negative for HGUC, AUC: Atypical urothelial cell, LGUN: Low-grade urothelial neoplasm, SHGUC: Suspicious for HGUC, N/C: Nuclear-cytoplasmic, 3D: Three-dimensional