The Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytopathology

Author:

Hindi Issa1ORCID,Simsir Aylin1,Szeto Oliver1,Hernandez Osvaldo1,Sun Wei1,Zhou Fang1ORCID,Brandler Tamar C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, New York University Langone Health , New York, NY , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Our study assesses whether the Milan System for Reporting Salivary Gland Cytopathology (MSRSGC) offers any benefit over the original cytology classification, and measures interobserver agreement. Methods Four cytopathologists retrospectively blindly classified preoperative cytology by MSRSGC from 101 resected salivary tumors. Consensus MSRSGC diagnoses were correlated with surgical pathology diagnoses and compared with the original cytology classification. Diagnostic parameters were calculated for both systems. Interobserver variability was assessed. Results The original cytology classification vs MSRSGC had sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 75.0% vs 78.3%, 97.1% vs 98.0%, 91.2% vs 94.7%, and 90.1% vs 90.0%, respectively. The original cytology classification risk of neoplasm (RON) was 91.7% for “negative for malignancy” and 100.0% for other categories. The MSRSGC RON was 71.4% in category II (nonneoplastic) and 100.0% in all other categories. The original cytology classification risk of malignancy (ROM) ranged from 0.0% for “atypical” to 100.0% for “positive for malignancy.” The MSRSGC ROM ranged from 0.0% in categories I (nondiagnostic) and III (nonneoplastic) to 100.0% in category VI (malignant). Weighted agreement using the MSRSGC was 92% (Gwet AC1, 0.84); unweighted agreement was 69% (Gwet AC1, 0.64). MSRSGC category IVA (benign neoplasm) was most likely to show interobserver agreement, with complete agreement in 67% of cases. Conclusions The MSRSGC performs similarly to the original cytology classification and shows relatively high interobserver agreement.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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