| Literature DB >> 32734520 |
Emma J Groen1, Jan Hudecek2, Lennart Mulder3, Maartje van Seijen3, Mathilde M Almekinders3, Stoyan Alexov4, Anikó Kovács5, Ales Ryska6, Zsuzsanna Varga7, Francisco-Javier Andreu Navarro8, Simonetta Bianchi9, Willem Vreuls10, Eva Balslev11, Max V Boot12, Janina Kulka13, Ewa Chmielik14, Ellis Barbé12, Mathilda J de Rooij15, Winand Vos16, Andrea Farkas17, Natalja E Leeuwis-Fedorovich18, Peter Regitnig19, Pieter J Westenend20, Loes F S Kooreman21, Cecily Quinn22, Giuseppe Floris23,24, Gábor Cserni25,26, Paul J van Diest27, Esther H Lips3, Michael Schaapveld28, Jelle Wesseling29,30.
Abstract
PURPOSE: For optimal management of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), reproducible histopathological assessment is essential to distinguish low-risk from high-risk DCIS. Therefore, we analyzed interrater reliability of histopathological DCIS features and assessed their associations with subsequent ipsilateral invasive breast cancer (iIBC) risk.Entities:
Keywords: Ductal carcinoma in situ; Interrater reliability; Invasive breast cancer; Risk stratification
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32734520 PMCID: PMC7497690 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-020-05816-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Fig. 1Flow diagram for patient selection and exclusions Subcohort randomly selected patient group; outside subcohort patients who developed subsequent ipsilateral invasive breast cancer not included in the subcohort, iIBC ipsilateral invasive breast cancer; a2 outside subcohort patients developed invasive breast cancer after a mastectomy was performed during follow-up, for other reasons than iIBC.
Agreement, Gwet’s AC2 (GAC2), and Krippendorff’s alpha (KA) coefficients per histopathological feature
| Histopathological feature | Agreement (%) | 95% CI (%) | GAC2 | 95% CI | KA | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade (1, 2 or 3) | 76.4 | 75.27–77.52 | 0.52 | 0.50–0.55 | 0.34 | 0.30–0.39 |
| Grade (1 versus 2 + 3) | 83.5 | 81.33–85.68 | 0.78 | 0.74–0.82 | 0.35 | 0.28–0.42 |
| Grade (1 + 2 versus 3) | 69.3 | 66.94–71.63 | 0.43 | 0.38–0.49 | 0.34 | 0.29–0.38 |
| Grade (low versus high) | 72.8 | 70.54–75.12 | 0.52 | 0.47–0.57 | 0.38 | 0.32–0.44 |
| Dominant growth pattern | 84.8 | 82.58–86.97 | 0.78 | 0.75–0.82 | 0.44 | 0.37–0.51 |
| Calcifications | 81.1 | 78.81–83.40 | 0.70 | 0.65–0.75 | 0.49 | 0.43–0.54 |
| Necrosis | 81.4 | 79.12–83.64 | 0.70 | 0.66–0.75 | 0.47 | 0.41–0.53 |
| Mitotic activity | 78.5 | 76.12–80.97 | 0.70 | 0.65–0.74 | 0.24 | 0.19–0.29 |
| Periductal fibrosis (absent, subtle or prominent presence) | 70.9 | 69.71–72.13 | 0.37 | 0.34–0.39 | 0.25 | 0.22–0.29 |
| Periductal fibrosis (present versus absent) | 71.2 | 68.82–73.48 | 0.53 | 0.48–0.58 | 0.23 | 0.18–0.28 |
| Type of periductal fibrosis (if present) | 70.5 | 67.57–73.37 | 0.50 | 0.44–0.57 | 0.26 | 0.21–0.31 |
| Lymphocytic infiltrate (absent, subtle or prominent presence) | 77.1 | 75.82–78.36 | 0.50 | 0.47–0.53 | 0.42 | 0.38–0.47 |
| Lymphocytic infiltrate (present versus absent) | 73.0 | 70.51–75.40 | 0.51 | 0.45–0.56 | 0.38 | 0.33–0.43 |
GAC2 Gwet’s AC2, KA Krippendorff’s alpha, weighted analysis was performed for ordinal features with more than 2 categories using linear weights (grade 1–3, periductal fibrosis, and lymphocytic infiltrate), CI confidence interval
Clinical characteristics and histopathological characteristics (based on the majority opinion) of the study population
| Number of DCIS patients (%) | All patients with iIBC 137* | Subcohort 215** |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment | ||
| BCS + RT | 42 (30.7) | 128 (59.5) |
| BCS alone | 95 (69.3) | 87 (40.5) |
| Age at DCIS diagnosis, years, median (iqr) | 57.5 (53.1–63.6) | 58.4 (53.4–64.0) |
| Age at DCIS diagnosis, years (quartiles) | ||
| ≥ 49.5—≤ 53.4 | 37 (27.0) | 54 (25.1) |
| > 53.4—≤ 58.2 | 36 (26.3) | 50 (23.3) |
| > 58.2—≤ 63.8 | 32 (23.4) | 56 (26.1) |
| > 63.8—≤ 75.6 | 32 (23.4) | 55 (25.6) |
| Period of DCIS diagnosisa | ||
| 1993—1998 | 76 (55.5) | 82 (38.1) |
| 1999—2004 | 61 (44.5) | 133 (61.9) |
| Median follow-up, years (iqr) | 11.2 (8.6–14.1) | |
| Time to iIBC, years, median (iqr) | 5.3 (3.3–7.6) | |
| Grade (1,2 or 3) | ||
| Grade 1 | 10 (7.3) | 23 (10.7) |
| Grade 2 | 67 (48.9) | 115 (53.5) |
| Grade 3 | 60 (43.8) | 77 (35.8) |
| Grade (low versus high) | ||
| Low grade | 31 (22.6) | 60 (27.9) |
| High grade | 106 (77.4) | 155 (72.1) |
| Dominant growth patternb | ||
| FEA, clinging, (micro)papillary | 14 (10.2) | 34 (15.9) |
| Cribriform, solid | 123 (89.8) | 180 (84.1) |
| Calcifications | ||
| Present | 103 (75.2) | 168 (78.1) |
| Absent | 34 (24.8) | 47 (21.9) |
| Necrosis | ||
| Present | 109 (79.6) | 167 (77.7) |
| Absent | 28 (20.4) | 48 (22.3) |
| Mitoses | ||
| Sparse | 114 (83.2) | 198 (92.1) |
| Many | 23 (16.8) | 17 (7.9) |
| Periductal fibrosis | ||
| Absent | 28 (20.4) | 41 (19.1) |
| Subtle | 73 (53.4) | 102 (47.4) |
| Prominent | 36 (26.3) | 72 (33.5) |
| Type of periductal fibrosisc | ||
| Sclerotic | 80 (73.4) | 133 (76.4) |
| Myxoid | 29 (26.6) | 41 (23.6) |
| Lymphocytic infiltrate | ||
| Absent | 38 (27.7) | 77 (35.8) |
| Subtle | 65 (47.5) | 89 (41.4) |
| Prominent | 34 (24.8) | 49 (22.8) |
subcohort randomly selected patient group, iqr interquartile range
*Six out of all patients with iIBC developed breast cancer metastases only
**Sixteen patients from the subcohort developed an iIBC and four developed breast cancer metastases only
a1993–1998 reflecting part of the screening implementation phase and 1999–2004 reflecting full nationwide coverage
bIn one patient, growth pattern was scored as not assessable by all raters and was therefore excluded (n included patients = 331); FEA = flat epithelial atypia
cFor type of fibrosis, patients were only included when according to the majority opinion periductal fibrosis was present, either subtle or prominent (n included patients = 268)
Fig. 2Photomicrographs from histopathological DCIS features based on the majority opinion. a low-grade DCIS (hematoxylin and eosin (H&E); × 200), b high-grade DCIS (H&E; × 200), c many mitoses (H&E; × 200), d necrosis (H&E; × 200), e subtle periductal fibrosis (H&E; × 50), f prominent periductal fibrosis (H&E; × 50), g sclerotic periductal fibrosis (H&E; × 50), h myxoid periductal fibrosis (H&E; × 50), i subtle periductal lymphocytic infiltrate (H&E; × 50), j prominent periductal lymphocytic infiltrate (H&E; × 50)
Associations of histopathological features with subsequent iIBC in multivariable analysis
| Histopathological feature | BCS alone | BCS + RT | Treatment interaction | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95% CI) | HR (95% CI) | ||||||
| Grade (1 + 2 versus 3) | 0.017 | ||||||
| 1 + 2 | 107 (52) | REF | 104 (28) | REF | |||
| 3 | 62 (43) | 2.64 (1.35–5.14) | 0.005 | 58 (14) | 0.79 (0.38–1.62) | 0.52 | |
| Dominant growth pattern | 0.022 | ||||||
| FEA/clinging/(micro)papillary | 23 (7) | REF | 23 (7) | REF | |||
| Cribriform/solid | 146 (88) | 3.70 (1.34–10.23) | 0.012 | 139 (35) | 0.77 (0.32–1.85) | 0.56 | |
n total number (number of patients with subsequent iIBC), HR Hazard Ratio, CI confidence interval, P P value, REF reference, FEA flat epithelial atypia
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier curve illustrating iIBC incidence after diagnosis of DCIS treated by BCS alone. GP growth pattern, other flat epithelial atypia, clinging and (micro)papillary growth pattern. The red dashed reference line depicts the maximum reached incidence in patients with DCIS grade 3 with a cribriform/solid growth pattern treated with BCS + RT