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Abstract
In gynecologic oncology, surgical and adjuvant therapy
rely heavily on correct pathologic diagnosis. Thus, in-house review of
outside pathologic slides and specimens has become routine within large
tertiary referral centers. We sought to determine the impact of outside
pathologic slide review on gynecologic oncology patient care and
treatment. Gynecologic oncology cases between January 2007 and January
2012 were evaluated. Clinical information was gathered from
comprehensive chart reviews and reports created after multidisciplinary
treatment planning conferences. Discrepancies in diagnosis were
identified as major if they resulted in a treatment alteration and minor
if they did not impact care. Data were analyzed using descriptive
statistics and the Fisher exact test. A total of 279 cases were
identified and reviewed as part of the study—126 (45.2%) biopsy/cytology
specimens and 153 (54.8%) surgical excision specimens. Minor
discrepancies were noted in 25 reviewed cases (9%) and major
discrepancies in 19 cases (6.8%). Among those patients in whom
management was changed based on specialized pathologic review, 50%
underwent additional surgery, 16% had their surgical plan modified, and
16% received adjuvant treatment or had their adjuvant treatment
modified. In 235 cases (84.2%), institutional rereview of the outside
slides/specimens did not result in a change in diagnosis. Diagnostic
discrepancies were evenly distributed across all primary sites
evaluated. The cost of outside pathologic review was estimated at $2,936
US dollars per change in diagnosis. Mandatory slide review in
gynecologic oncology is important and results in diagnostic changes in
approximately 16% of cases, with 43% of those changes impacting
treatment.
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