Reliability and validity of a histologic score as a marker for skin cancer chemoprevention studies.

OBJECTIVE To develop a reliable and valid scoring system for grading skin biopsies from actinic keratosis (AK) and sun-damaged skin for use in evaluating the efficacy of skin cancer chemopreventive agents. STUDY DESIGN A panel of dermatopathologists developed histologic criteria and diagnostic definitions for the progression of lesions from early AK to AK. The criteria were then applied to a sample of 335 histologic slides from an ongoing chemoprevention study. A 10% sample of 35 slides was reread in order to assess intrarater reliability. RESULTS Six of the 7 criteria demonstrated high reliability (> 85%). The total histologic score, calculated using the 6 criteria, was found to significantly differentiate between (blinded) biopsy location (normal, pre-AK, AK and adjacent to squamous cell carcinoma) and histologic diagnosis (normal, pre- or early AK, AK and squamous cell carcinoma). CONCLUSION The total histologic score, having demonstrated reliability on repeated readings and validity in its association with biopsy location and histologic score, is a reliable and valid end point for judging the efficacy of agents in skin cancer chemoprevention studies. Additional interrater reliability tests utilizing larger test sets and a rigorous statistical design should be undertaken to establish its portability.