Back to Search Start Over

Impact of Expert Pathologic Review of Lymphoma Diagnosis: Study of Patients From the French Lymphopath Network

Authors :
Mylène Dandoit
Catherine Chassagne-Clément
Alexandra Traverse-Glehen
Gilles Salles
Marie Parrens
Peggy Dartigues
Marie-Pierre Chenard-Neu
Marc Maynadié
B. Fabiani
Pierre Brousset
Françoise Berger
Laurent Martin
Jean-François Michiels
Claire Bastien
Josette Brière
Michel Peoc'h
Patrick Tas
Diane Damotte
Philippe Gaulard
Martine Patey
Nadia Amara
Manuela Delage
Anne Moreau
Isabelle Quintin-Roue
Céline Bossard
Antoine de Mascarel
Marie-Christine Copin
Pierre Déchelotte
Henri Sevestre
Isabelle Soubeyran
Sylvie Thiebault
Luc Xerri
Camille Laurent
Jean-Michel Picquenot
Christiane Copie-Bergman
Antoine Martin
Frédéric Charlotte
Blandine Fabre
Béatrice Vergier
Georges Delsol
Flavie Arbion
Corinne Haioun
Tony Petrella
Marine Baron
Marie-Christine Rousselet
Thomas Filleron
Cécile Le Naoures
Thérèse Rousset
Nicole Brousse
Thierry Jo Molina
Source :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. 35(18)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Purpose To prospectively assess the clinical impact of expert review of lymphoma diagnosis in France. Materials and Methods From January 2010 to December 2013, 42,145 samples from patients with newly diagnosed or suspected lymphomas were reviewed, according to the 2008 WHO classification, in real time by experts through the Lymphopath Network. Changes in diagnosis between referral and expert review were classified as major or minor according to their potential impact on patient care. Results The 42,145 reviewed samples comprised 36,920 newly diagnosed mature lymphomas, 321 precursor lymphoid neoplasms, 314 myeloid disorders, and 200 nonhematopoietic neoplasms, with 4,390 benign lesions. There were 4,352 cutaneous and 32,568 noncutaneous lymphomas. The most common mature noncutaneous lymphomas were diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (32.4%), follicular lymphomas (15.3%), classic Hodgkin lymphomas (13%), peripheral T-cell lymphomas (6.3%) of which angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphomas (2.3%) were the most frequent, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphomas (5.8%). A diagnostic change between referral and expert review occurred in 19.7% of patients, with an estimated impact on patient care for 17.4% of patients. This rate was significantly higher for patients sent with a provisional diagnosis seeking expert second opinion (37.8%) than for patients sent with a formal diagnosis (3.7%). The most frequent discrepancies were misclassifications in lymphoma subtype (41.3%), with 12.3% being misclassifications among small B-cell lymphoma entities. Fewer than 2% of changes were between benign and malignant lymphoid conditions. Minor changes (2.3%) mostly consisted of follicular lymphoma misgrading and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma subtype misclassification. Conclusion To our knowledge, this study provides the largest ever description of the distribution of lymphoma entities in a western country and highlights how expert review significantly contributes to a precise lymphoma diagnosis and optimal clinical management in a proportion of patients.

Details

ISSN :
15277755
Volume :
35
Issue :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b70ca236d3a1d656045ef18aef4255c6