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Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation

We examined how pathologists’ process their perceptions of how their interpretations on diagnoses for breast pathology cases agree with a reference standard. To accomplish this, we created an individualized self-directed continuing medical education program that showed pathologists interpreting brea...

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Autores principales: Carney, Patricia A., Allison, Kimberly H., Oster, Natalia V., Frederick, Paul D., Morgan, Thomas R., Geller, Berta M., Weaver, Donald L., Elmore, Joann G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4925256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27056072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.2016.62
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author Carney, Patricia A.
Allison, Kimberly H.
Oster, Natalia V.
Frederick, Paul D.
Morgan, Thomas R.
Geller, Berta M.
Weaver, Donald L.
Elmore, Joann G.
author_facet Carney, Patricia A.
Allison, Kimberly H.
Oster, Natalia V.
Frederick, Paul D.
Morgan, Thomas R.
Geller, Berta M.
Weaver, Donald L.
Elmore, Joann G.
author_sort Carney, Patricia A.
collection PubMed
description We examined how pathologists’ process their perceptions of how their interpretations on diagnoses for breast pathology cases agree with a reference standard. To accomplish this, we created an individualized self-directed continuing medical education program that showed pathologists interpreting breast specimens how their interpretations on a test set compared to a reference diagnosis developed by a consensus panel of experienced breast pathologists. After interpreting a test set of 60 cases, 92 participating pathologists were asked to estimate how their interpretations compared to the standard for benign without atypia, atypia, ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive cancer. We then asked pathologists their thoughts about learning about differences in their perceptions compared to actual agreement. Overall, participants tended to overestimate their agreement with the reference standard, with a mean difference of 5.5% (75.9% actual agreement; 81.4% estimated agreement), especially for atypia and were least likely to overestimate it for invasive breast cancer. Non-academic affiliated pathologists were more likely to more closely estimate their performance relative to academic affiliated pathologists (77.6% versus 48%; p=0.001), whereas participants affiliated with an academic medical center were more likely to underestimate agreement with their diagnoses compared to non-academic affiliated pathologists (40% versus 6%). Prior to the continuing medical education program, nearly 55% (54.9%) of participants could not estimate whether they would over-interpret the cases or under-interpret them relative to the reference diagnosis. Nearly 80% (79.8%) reported learning new information from this individualized web-based continuing medical education program, and 23.9% of pathologists identified strategies they would change their practice to improve. In conclusion, when evaluating breast pathology specimens, pathologists do a good job of estimating their diagnostic agreement with a reference standard, but for atypia cases, pathologists tend to overestimate diagnostic agreement. Many of these were able to identify ways to improve.
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spelling pubmed-49252562016-10-08 Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation Carney, Patricia A. Allison, Kimberly H. Oster, Natalia V. Frederick, Paul D. Morgan, Thomas R. Geller, Berta M. Weaver, Donald L. Elmore, Joann G. Mod Pathol Article We examined how pathologists’ process their perceptions of how their interpretations on diagnoses for breast pathology cases agree with a reference standard. To accomplish this, we created an individualized self-directed continuing medical education program that showed pathologists interpreting breast specimens how their interpretations on a test set compared to a reference diagnosis developed by a consensus panel of experienced breast pathologists. After interpreting a test set of 60 cases, 92 participating pathologists were asked to estimate how their interpretations compared to the standard for benign without atypia, atypia, ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive cancer. We then asked pathologists their thoughts about learning about differences in their perceptions compared to actual agreement. Overall, participants tended to overestimate their agreement with the reference standard, with a mean difference of 5.5% (75.9% actual agreement; 81.4% estimated agreement), especially for atypia and were least likely to overestimate it for invasive breast cancer. Non-academic affiliated pathologists were more likely to more closely estimate their performance relative to academic affiliated pathologists (77.6% versus 48%; p=0.001), whereas participants affiliated with an academic medical center were more likely to underestimate agreement with their diagnoses compared to non-academic affiliated pathologists (40% versus 6%). Prior to the continuing medical education program, nearly 55% (54.9%) of participants could not estimate whether they would over-interpret the cases or under-interpret them relative to the reference diagnosis. Nearly 80% (79.8%) reported learning new information from this individualized web-based continuing medical education program, and 23.9% of pathologists identified strategies they would change their practice to improve. In conclusion, when evaluating breast pathology specimens, pathologists do a good job of estimating their diagnostic agreement with a reference standard, but for atypia cases, pathologists tend to overestimate diagnostic agreement. Many of these were able to identify ways to improve. 2016-04-08 2016-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4925256/ /pubmed/27056072 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.2016.62 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Carney, Patricia A.
Allison, Kimberly H.
Oster, Natalia V.
Frederick, Paul D.
Morgan, Thomas R.
Geller, Berta M.
Weaver, Donald L.
Elmore, Joann G.
Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title_full Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title_fullStr Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title_full_unstemmed Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title_short Identifying and Processing the Gap Between Perceived and Actual Agreement in Breast Pathology Interpretation
title_sort identifying and processing the gap between perceived and actual agreement in breast pathology interpretation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4925256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27056072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.2016.62
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