Digital Examination of LYmph node CYtopathology Using the Sydney system (DELYCYUS): An international, multi‐institutional study

Author:

Caputo Alessandro1ORCID,Fraggetta Filippo2,Cretella Pasquale3ORCID,Cozzolino Immacolata4,Eccher Albino5ORCID,Girolami Ilaria6ORCID,Marletta Stefano7,Troncone Giancarlo8ORCID,Vigliar Elena8ORCID,Acanfora Gennaro8ORCID,Zarra Karen Villar9ORCID,Torres Rivas Héctor Enrique10ORCID,Fadda Guido11,Field Andrew12ORCID,Katz Ruth13,Vielh Philippe14,Eloy Catarina15ORCID,Rajwanshi Arvind16,Gupta Nalini17ORCID,Al‐Abbadi Mousa18,Bustami Nadwa18,Arar Tala18,Calaminici Maria1920,Raine Juliet I.19,Barroca Helena21,Canão Pedro Amoroso21,Ehinger Mats22,Rajabian Nilofar22,Dey Pranab17ORCID,Medeiros L. Jeffrey23,El Hussein Siba24ORCID,Lin Oscar25ORCID,D’Antonio Antonio26,Bode‐Lesniewska Beata27ORCID,Rossi Esther Diana28ORCID,Zeppa Pio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology University Hospital of Salerno Salerno Italy

2. Department of Pathology Gravina and Santo Pietro Hospital Caltagirone Italy

3. Department of Advanced Biomedical Sciences “Federico II” University Naples Italy

4. Department of Mental and Physical Health and Preventive Medicine Università Degli Studi Della Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli” Naples Italy

5. Department of Pathology and Diagnostics University and Hospital Trust of Verona Verona Italy

6. Department of Pathology Provincial Hospital of Bolzano South Tyrolean Health Care Service‐South Tyrol Health Authority Bolzano‐Bozen Italy

7. Department of Diagnostics and Public Health University and Hospital Trust of Verona Verona Italy

8. Department of Public Health “Federico II” University Naples Italy

9. Pathology Department Hospital Universitario Del Henares Coslada Spain

10. Pathology Department Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias Oviedo Spain

11. Department of Human Pathology of the Adulthood and Developing Age “Gaetano Barresi” Section of Pathology University of Messina Messina Italy

12. Department of Anatomical Pathology St Vincent’s Hospital University of New South Wales and University of Notre Dame Sydney New South Wales Australia

13. Department of Pathology Tel HaShomer Hospital Tel Aviv Israel

14. Medipath and American Hospital of Paris Paris France

15. Institute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto Porto Portugal

16. All India Institute of Medical Sciences Raebareli India

17. Department of Cytopathology and Gynecologic Pathology Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research Chandigarh India

18. Department of Pathology Microbiology and Forensic Medicine The University of Jordan Amman Jordan

19. Specialist Integrated Hematological Malignancy Diagnostic Service Department of Cellular Pathology Barts Health National Health Service Trust England UK

20. Center for Hemato‐Oncology Barts Cancer Institute London UK

21. Serviço de Anatomia Patológica Hospital S João‐Porto Porto Portugal

22. Department of Clinical Sciences Pathology, Skane University Hospital Lund University Lund Sweden

23. Department of Hematopathology The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

24. Department of Pathology University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York USA

25. Department of Pathology Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York New York USA

26. Department of Pathology Ospedale Del Mare Napoli Italy

27. Pathologie Institut Enge Zurich Switzerland

28. Division of Anatomic Pathology and Histology, Catholic University Rome Rome Italy

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAfter a series of standardized reporting systems in cytopathology, the Sydney system was recently introduced to address the need for reproducibility and standardization in lymph node cytopathology. Since then, the risk of malignancy for the categories of the Sydney system has been explored by several studies, but no studies have yet examined the interobserver reproducibility of the Sydney system.MethodsThe authors assessed interobserver reproducibility of the Sydney system on 85 lymph node fine‐needle aspiration cytology cases reviewed by 15 cytopathologists from 12 institutions in eight different countries, resulting in 1275 diagnoses. In total, 186 slides stained with Diff‐Quik, Papanicolaou, and immunocytochemistry were scanned. A subset of the cases included clinical data and results from ultrasound examinations, flow cytometry immunophenotyping, and fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis. The study participants assessed the cases digitally using whole‐slide images.ResultsOverall, the authors observed an almost perfect agreement of cytopathologists with the ground truth (median weighted Cohen κ = 0.887; interquartile range, κ = 0.210) and moderate overall interobserver concordance (Fleiss κ = 0.476). There was substantial agreement for the inadequate and malignant categories (κ = 0.794 and κ = 0.729, respectively), moderate agreement for the benign category (κ = 0.490), and very slight agreement for the suspicious (κ = 0.104) and atypical (κ = 0.075) categories.ConclusionsThe Sydney system for reporting lymph node cytopathology shows adequate interobserver concordance. Digital microscopy is an adequate means to assess lymph node cytopathology specimens.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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