Clinical impact and frequency of anatomic pathology errors in cancer diagnoses

被引:124
作者
Raab, SS
Grzybicki, DM
Janosky, JE
Zarbo, RJ
Meier, FA
Jensen, C
Geyer, SJ
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Sch Med, Dept Pathol, Pittsburgh, PA 15232 USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Sch Med, Dept Family Med & Clin Epidemiol, Pittsburgh, PA 15232 USA
[3] Henry Ford Hlth Syst, Dept Pathol, Detroit, MI USA
[4] Univ Iowa Healthcare, Dept Pathol, Iowa City, IA USA
[5] Western Penn Hosp, Dept Pathol, Pittsburgh, PA 15224 USA
关键词
diagnostic error; pathology; patient safety; cancer; interobserver agreement;
D O I
10.1002/cncr.21431
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND. To the authors' knowledge, the frequency and clinical impact of errors in the anatomic pathology diagnosis of cancer have been pool-IN, characterized to date. METHODS. The authors examined errors in patients who underwent anatomic pathology tests to determine the presence or absence of cancer or precancerous lesions in four hospitals. They analyzed 1 year of retrospective errors detected through a standardized cytologic-histologic correlation process (in which patient same-site cytologic and histologic specimens were compared). Medical record reviews were performed to determine patient outcomes. The authors also measured the institutional frequency, cause (i.e., pathologist interpretation or sampling), and clinical impact of diagnostic cancer errors. RESULTS. The frequency of errors in cancer diagnosis was found to be dependent on the institution (P < 0.001) and ranged from 1.79-9.42% and from 4.87-11.8% of all correlated gynecologic and nongynecologic cases, respectively. A statistically significant association Was found between institution and error Cause (P < 0.001); the Cause of errors resulting from pathologic misinterpretation ranged front 5.0-50.7% (the remainder were due to clinical sampling). A statistically significant association was found between institution and assignment of the clinical impact of error (P < 0.001); the aggregated data demonstrated that for gynecologic and nongynecologic errors, 45% and 39%, respectively, were associated with harm. The pairwise kappa statistic for interobserver agreement oil cause of error ranged from 0.118-0.737. CONCLUSIONS. Errors in cancer diagnosis are reported to Occur in up to 11.8% of all reviewed cytologic-histologic specimen pairs. To the authors' knowledge, little agreement exists regarding whether pathology errors are secondary to misinterpretation or poor clinical sampling Of tissues and whether pathology errors result in serious harm.
引用
收藏
页码:2205 / 2213
页数:9
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