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A critical evaluation of visual proportion of Gleason 4 and maximum cancer core length quantified by histopathologists

Authors :
Joseph M. Norris
Derek J. Rosario
Alex Freeman
Louise J. Brown
Alex Kirkham
Urszula Stopka-Farooqui
Shonit Punwani
Hayley C. Whitaker
Hashim U. Ahmed
Raj Persad
Lina M. Carmona Echeverria
Nick Burns-Cox
Robert Oldroyd
Richard Kaplan
Mark Emberton
Richard Hindley
Cristina Cardona Barrena
Yipeng Hu
Iqbal S. Shergill
Aiman Haider
Mathias Winkler
Alastair Henderson
Ahmed El-Shater Bosaily
Vasilis Stavrinides
Susan Heavey
Simon Bott
Avi Rosenfeld
Maneesh Ghei
David J. Hawkes
Tim Dudderidge
Benjamin S. Simpson
Hayley Pye
Source :
Scientific Reports, Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Gleason score 7 prostate cancer with a higher proportion of pattern 4 (G4) has been linked to genomic heterogeneity and poorer patient outcome. The current assessment of G4 proportion uses estimation by a pathologist, with a higher proportion of G4 more likely to trigger additional imaging and treatment over active surveillance. This estimation method has been shown to have inter-observer variability. Fifteen patients with Prostate Grade Group (GG) 2 (Gleason 3 + 4) and fifteen patients with GG3 (Gleason 4 + 3) disease were selected from the PROMIS study with 192 haematoxylin and eosin-stained slides scanned. Two experienced uropathologists assessed the maximum cancer core length (MCCL) and G4 proportion using the current standard method (visual estimation) followed by detailed digital manual annotation of each G4 area and measurement of MCCL (planimetric estimation) using freely available software by the same two experts. We aimed to compare visual estimation of G4 and MCCL to a pathologist-driven digital measurement. We show that the visual and digital MCCL measurement differs up to 2 mm in 76.6% (23/30) with a high degree of agreement between the two measurements; Visual gave a median MCCL of 10 ± 2.70 mm (IQR 4, range 5–15 mm) compared to digital of 9.88 ± 3.09 mm (IQR 3.82, range 5.01–15.7 mm) (p = 0.64) The visual method for assessing G4 proportion over-estimates in all patients, compared to digital measurements [median 11.2% (IQR 38.75, range 4.7–17.9%) vs 30.4% (IQR 18.37, range 12.9–50.76%)]. The discordance was higher as the amount of G4 increased (Bias 18.71, CI 33.87–48.75, r 0.7, p

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d89f5383a014c90f6fa3ac045f91672f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73524-z