Influence of clinical and pathologic features on the pathologist's diagnosis of mycosis fungoides: a pilot study

Although clinicopathologic correlation is critical in the diagnosis of early mycosis fungoides (MF), how clinical information directly affects the pathologist's interpretation is unknown. This pilot study aimed to assess the influence of provided clinical information and specific histopathologi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of cutaneous pathology Vol. 42; no. 7; pp. 471 - 479
Main Authors Rovner, Rebecca, Smith, Hayden L., Katz, Peter J, Liu, Vincent
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.2015
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Summary:Although clinicopathologic correlation is critical in the diagnosis of early mycosis fungoides (MF), how clinical information directly affects the pathologist's interpretation is unknown. This pilot study aimed to assess the influence of provided clinical information and specific histopathologic features on the histopathologic diagnosis of MF vs. its inflammatory simulants. A computerized survey recorded diagnostic impressions by 24 dermatopathologists of 30 hematoxylin‐eosin stained images, including 15 MF images and 15 dermatitis images. Images were accompanied by concordant clinical descriptions (33%), no clinical information (33%) or discordant clinical descriptions (33%). Percentage of correctly classified MF histopathologic images for the three scenarios of concordant clinical information, no clinical information or discordant clinical information were 32% (kappa 0.19), 56% (kappa 0.12) and 16% (kappa 0.33), respectively. The percentage of correctly classified slides presented with no clinical information was different from the other two groups (p < 0.0001). Pautrier collections were most associated with correct classification. Clinical information may play a significant role in the histopathologic diagnosis of MF, although there may be some value in initial blinded histopathologic interpretation. Specific histopathologic features differ in relative importance in the diagnosis of MF.
Bibliography:The concept of the study with preliminary pilot data (two respondents) was presented in poster format at the American Society of Dermatopathology Annual Meeting in 2010.
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ArticleID:CUP12495
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ISSN:0303-6987
1600-0560
DOI:10.1111/cup.12495