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Mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at a large referral hospital.
Cancer. 1999 Dec 01; 86(11):2426-35.C

Abstract

BACKGROUND

When patients are referred to one's own institution for therapy based on a histopathologic diagnosis rendered at another institution, many hospitals require a second opinion of the surgical pathology material. This quality assurance practice has been threatened in the era of managed care and cost containment.

METHODS

The authors reviewed the impact of mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Cases were collected prospectively over a 21-month period from April 1995 to December 1996. For the purposes of this study, a changed diagnosis was defined as a discordant diagnosis resulting in a major modification in therapy or prognosis. The majority of cases involved a change between benign and malignant or a major change in tumor classification. Changes involving a modification of tumor grade or stage were not included.

RESULTS

Of 6171 cases reviewed, second opinion surgical pathology resulted in 86 changed diagnoses (1.4%). Compared with the entire group, 2 organ systems were significantly more likely to undergo a change in diagnosis: serosal surfaces (9. 5%) (P < 0.0001) and the female reproductive tract (5.1%) (P < 0. 0001). Organ systems that were not more likely to undergo a change in diagnosis than the group as a whole included the skin (2.9%); central nervous system (2.8%); breast (1.4%); genitourinary system (1.2%); gastrointestinal tract (1.2%); hematologic system (1.1%); ear, nose, and throat (1.0%); bone/soft tissue (0.9%); lung (0.6%); endocrine (0%); mediastinum (0%); and cardiovascular system (0%).

CONCLUSIONS

Second opinion surgical pathology can result in major therapeutic and prognostic modifications for patients sent to large referral hospitals. Although the overall percentage of affected cases is not large, the consistent rate of discrepant diagnosis uncovered by second opinion surgical pathology may have an enormous human and financial impact. Accordingly, the authors recommend that review of the original histologic material should be undertaken prior to the institution of a major therapeutic endeavor.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10590387

Citation

Kronz, J D., et al. "Mandatory Second Opinion Surgical Pathology at a Large Referral Hospital." Cancer, vol. 86, no. 11, 1999, pp. 2426-35.
Kronz JD, Westra WH, Epstein JI. Mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at a large referral hospital. Cancer. 1999;86(11):2426-35.
Kronz, J. D., Westra, W. H., & Epstein, J. I. (1999). Mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at a large referral hospital. Cancer, 86(11), 2426-35.
Kronz JD, Westra WH, Epstein JI. Mandatory Second Opinion Surgical Pathology at a Large Referral Hospital. Cancer. 1999 Dec 1;86(11):2426-35. PubMed PMID: 10590387.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at a large referral hospital. AU - Kronz,J D, AU - Westra,W H, AU - Epstein,J I, PY - 1999/12/11/pubmed PY - 1999/12/11/medline PY - 1999/12/11/entrez SP - 2426 EP - 35 JF - Cancer JO - Cancer VL - 86 IS - 11 N2 - BACKGROUND: When patients are referred to one's own institution for therapy based on a histopathologic diagnosis rendered at another institution, many hospitals require a second opinion of the surgical pathology material. This quality assurance practice has been threatened in the era of managed care and cost containment. METHODS: The authors reviewed the impact of mandatory second opinion surgical pathology at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Cases were collected prospectively over a 21-month period from April 1995 to December 1996. For the purposes of this study, a changed diagnosis was defined as a discordant diagnosis resulting in a major modification in therapy or prognosis. The majority of cases involved a change between benign and malignant or a major change in tumor classification. Changes involving a modification of tumor grade or stage were not included. RESULTS: Of 6171 cases reviewed, second opinion surgical pathology resulted in 86 changed diagnoses (1.4%). Compared with the entire group, 2 organ systems were significantly more likely to undergo a change in diagnosis: serosal surfaces (9. 5%) (P < 0.0001) and the female reproductive tract (5.1%) (P < 0. 0001). Organ systems that were not more likely to undergo a change in diagnosis than the group as a whole included the skin (2.9%); central nervous system (2.8%); breast (1.4%); genitourinary system (1.2%); gastrointestinal tract (1.2%); hematologic system (1.1%); ear, nose, and throat (1.0%); bone/soft tissue (0.9%); lung (0.6%); endocrine (0%); mediastinum (0%); and cardiovascular system (0%). CONCLUSIONS: Second opinion surgical pathology can result in major therapeutic and prognostic modifications for patients sent to large referral hospitals. Although the overall percentage of affected cases is not large, the consistent rate of discrepant diagnosis uncovered by second opinion surgical pathology may have an enormous human and financial impact. Accordingly, the authors recommend that review of the original histologic material should be undertaken prior to the institution of a major therapeutic endeavor. SN - 0008-543X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10590387/Mandatory_second_opinion_surgical_pathology_at_a_large_referral_hospital_ L2 - https://medlineplus.gov/cancerinchildren.html DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -