Use of whole slide imaging in surgical pathology quality assurance: design and pilot validation studies.

By imaging large numbers of slides automatically at high resolution, modem automated whole slide imaging (WSI) systems have the potential to become useful tools in pathology practice. This article describes a pilot validation study for use of automated high-speed WSI systems for surgical pathology quality assurance (QA). This was a retrospective comparative study in which 24 full genitourinary cases (including 47 surgical parts and 391 slides) were independently reviewed with traditional microscopy and whole slide digital images. Approximately half the cases had neoplasia in the diagnostic line. At the end of the study, diagnostic discrepancies were evaluated by a pathology consensus committee. The study pathologists felt that the traditional and WSI methods were comparable for case review. They reported no difference in perceived case complexity or diagnostic confidence between the methods. There were 4 clinically insignificant discrepancies with the signed-out cases: 2 from glass slide and 2 with WSI review. Of the 2 discrepancies reported by the WSI method, the committee agreed with the reviewer once and the original report once. At the end of the study, the participants agreed that automated WSI is a viable potential modality for surgical pathology QA, especially in multifacility health systems that would like to establish interfacility QA. The participants felt that major issues limiting the implementation of WSI-based QA did not involve image acquisition or quality but rather image management issues such as the pathologist's interface, the hospital's network, and integration with the laboratory information system.

[1]  A J Belanger,et al.  Implementation of a practical digital imaging system for routine gross photography in an autopsy environment. , 2000, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[2]  F. J. W-M Automated complete slide digitization: a medium for simultaneous viewing by multiple pathologists , 2001 .

[3]  Fred R. Dee,et al.  Virtual microscopy for learning and assessment in pathology , 2004, The Journal of pathology.

[4]  Jiang Gu,et al.  Virtual microscopy and virtual slides in teaching, diagnosis, and research , 2005 .

[5]  Rebecca S. Crowley,et al.  The Virtual Slide Set - a Curriculum Development System for Digital Microscopy , 2003, AMIA.

[6]  R S Weinstein,et al.  Routine surgical telepathology in the Department of Veterans Affairs: experience-related improvements in pathologist performance in 2200 cases. , 1999, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[7]  Stephen S Raab,et al.  Patient safety in anatomic pathology: measuring discrepancy frequencies and causes. , 2009, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[8]  Stefano Forti,et al.  Digital Storage of Glass Slides for Quality Assurance in Histopathology and Cytopathology , 2002, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[9]  Charles A Blake,et al.  Teaching medical histology at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine: Transition to virtual slides and virtual microscopes. , 2003, Anatomical record. Part B, New anatomist.

[10]  E Schubert,et al.  A pathologist-designed imaging system for anatomic pathology signout, teaching, and research. , 1994, Seminars in diagnostic pathology.

[11]  Keith J Kaplan,et al.  Use of Robotic Telepathology for Frozen-Section Diagnosis: A Retrospective Trial of a Telepathology System for Intraoperative Consultation , 2002, Modern Pathology.

[12]  John R Davis,et al.  An array microscope for ultrarapid virtual slide processing and telepathology. Design, fabrication, and validation study. , 2004, Human pathology.

[13]  A. Renshaw,et al.  The human false‐negative rate of rescreening Pap tests , 2001, Cancer.

[14]  John R. Gilbertson,et al.  Clinical Slide Digitization: Whole Slide Imaging in Clinical Practice Experience from the University of Pittsburgh , 2005 .

[15]  Joel H. Saltz,et al.  The virtual microscope , 2003, IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine.

[16]  Klaus Kayser,et al.  Telepathology: Telecommunication, Electronic Education and Publication in Pathology , 1999 .