Background: The widespread use of rapid on-site evaluation is hampered by constraints related to time and resources, inadequate reimbursement, and evidence from randomized trials that show a lack of increase in diagnostic yield and specimen adequacy associated with its usage. Objective: We aimed to verify whether a pulmonologist can assess endosonography-derived lymph node samples after a comprehensive and reproducible training provided by a specialist pathologist. Methods:Prospective, observational trial structured in three phases. In the first (training) phase, a pathologist critically evaluated the smears from 150 archival endosonography cases with a pulmonologist. In the second (test) phase, the pulmonologist was asked to assess 50 archival endosonography-derived samples. In the last (real-life) phase, the pulmonologist classified the samples from 200 patients during the endosonography. The overall agreement between pulmonologist and pathologist (gold standard), assessed through -statistics, was the primary outcome. The agreement for the identification of specific cytological categories was the secondary outcome. Results: The overallagreement between pulmonologist and pathologist was 84% (0.765, 95% CI 0.732-0.826) in the test phase and 89.7% ( 0.844, 95% CI 0.799-0.881) in the real-life phase. The agreement for specific cytological categories was 92.7% (95% CI 0.824-0.980) for inadequate samples, 90.3% (95% CI 84.5-94.5%) for reactive lymphadenopathies, 90.5% (95% CI 0.845-0.946) for malignancy, and 73% (95% CI 0.515-0.897) for granulomatous samples. Conclusions: A trained pulmonologist can reliably assess adequacy and malignancy for endosonography-derived samples, which could be useful in institutions where a cytopathologist/cytotechnician is not available regularly.

Natali, F., Cancellieri, A., Tinelli, C., De Silvestri, A., Livi, V., Ferrari, M., Romagnoli, M., Paioli, D., Trisolini, R., A Trained Pulmonologist Can Reliably Assess Endosonography-Derived Lymph Node Samples during Rapid On-Site Evaluation, <<RESPIRATION>>, 2019; 97 (6): 540-547. [doi:10.1159/000496549] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/282317]

A Trained Pulmonologist Can Reliably Assess Endosonography-Derived Lymph Node Samples during Rapid On-Site Evaluation

Cancellieri, Alessandra;Livi, Vanina;Ferrari, Marco;Paioli, Daniela;Trisolini, Rocco
Ultimo
2019

Abstract

Background: The widespread use of rapid on-site evaluation is hampered by constraints related to time and resources, inadequate reimbursement, and evidence from randomized trials that show a lack of increase in diagnostic yield and specimen adequacy associated with its usage. Objective: We aimed to verify whether a pulmonologist can assess endosonography-derived lymph node samples after a comprehensive and reproducible training provided by a specialist pathologist. Methods:Prospective, observational trial structured in three phases. In the first (training) phase, a pathologist critically evaluated the smears from 150 archival endosonography cases with a pulmonologist. In the second (test) phase, the pulmonologist was asked to assess 50 archival endosonography-derived samples. In the last (real-life) phase, the pulmonologist classified the samples from 200 patients during the endosonography. The overall agreement between pulmonologist and pathologist (gold standard), assessed through -statistics, was the primary outcome. The agreement for the identification of specific cytological categories was the secondary outcome. Results: The overallagreement between pulmonologist and pathologist was 84% (0.765, 95% CI 0.732-0.826) in the test phase and 89.7% ( 0.844, 95% CI 0.799-0.881) in the real-life phase. The agreement for specific cytological categories was 92.7% (95% CI 0.824-0.980) for inadequate samples, 90.3% (95% CI 84.5-94.5%) for reactive lymphadenopathies, 90.5% (95% CI 0.845-0.946) for malignancy, and 73% (95% CI 0.515-0.897) for granulomatous samples. Conclusions: A trained pulmonologist can reliably assess adequacy and malignancy for endosonography-derived samples, which could be useful in institutions where a cytopathologist/cytotechnician is not available regularly.
2019
Inglese
Natali, F., Cancellieri, A., Tinelli, C., De Silvestri, A., Livi, V., Ferrari, M., Romagnoli, M., Paioli, D., Trisolini, R., A Trained Pulmonologist Can Reliably Assess Endosonography-Derived Lymph Node Samples during Rapid On-Site Evaluation, <<RESPIRATION>>, 2019; 97 (6): 540-547. [doi:10.1159/000496549] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/282317]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/282317
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