1. Synoptic reporting increases quality of upper gastrointestinal cancer pathology reports.
- Author
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Baranov NS, Nagtegaal ID, van Grieken NCT, Verhoeven RHA, Voorham QJM, Rosman C, and van der Post RS
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Netherlands, Retrospective Studies, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms pathology, Health Records, Personal, Pathology, Surgical methods, Pathology, Surgical standards
- Abstract
Introduction: Traditionally, surgical pathology reports are narrative. These report types are prone to error and missing data; therefore, structured standardized reporting was introduced. However, the effect of synoptic reporting on the completeness of esophageal and gastric carcinoma pathology reports is not yet established., Materials and Methods: A population-based retrospective nationwide cohort study in the Netherlands was conducted over a period of 2012-2016, utilizing the Netherlands Cancer Registry for patient data and the nationwide network and registry of histology for pathology data., Results: In total, 1148 narrative and 1311 synoptic pathology reports were included. Completeness was achieved in 56.4% of the narrative reports versus 97.0% of the synoptic reports (pā<ā0.01). Out of 21 standard items, 15 were significantly more frequently reported in synoptic reports., Conclusion: Synoptic reporting improves surgical pathology reporting quality and should be implemented in standard patient care.
- Published
- 2019
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