TY - JOUR
T1 - Reproducibility of biopsy diagnoses of endometrial hyperplasia
T2 - Evidence supporting a simplified classification
AU - Sherman, Mark E.
AU - Ronnett, Brigitte M.
AU - Ioffe, Olga B.
AU - Richesson, Douglas A.
AU - Rush, Brenda B.
AU - Glass, Andrew G.
AU - Chatterjee, Nilanjan
AU - Duggan, Maire A.
AU - Lacey, James V.
PY - 2008/7/1
Y1 - 2008/7/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Identifying which categories in the World Health Organization classification of endometrial hyperplasia contribute to suboptimal reproducibility is clinically important. METHODS: A 2-member panel reviewed 209 endometrial biopsy/curettage specimens originally diagnosed as incident endometrial hyperplasia as part of a progression study. Original diagnoses included the following: disordered proliferative endometrium, simple hyperplasia, complex hyperplasia, and atypical hyperplasia; panel diagnoses also included negative and carcinoma. We assessed percentage agreement and kappa statistics±standard errors (K±SE). RESULTS: Original and panel diagnoses (combining negative with disordered proliferative endometrium; atypical hyperplasia with carcinoma) agreed for 34.9% of biopsies (K-unweighted±SE=0.18±0.03; K-weighted±SE=0.27±0.04) . Panelists' diagnoses agreed (using 6 categories) for 51.7% of biopsies, corresponding to K-unweighted±SE=0.37±0.03, improving with weighting to K-weighted±SE=0.63±0.05. Reproducibility based on a 2-tier classification ([negative, disordered proliferative endometrium, simple hyperplasia, or complex hyperplasia] versus [atypical hyperplasia or carcinoma]) increased agreement between original and panel diagnoses to 82.8%, K-unweighted±SE=0.37±0.06, and between panelists to 87.0%, K-unweighted±SE=0.63±0.07. Agreement between panelists at a cutpoint of complex hyperplasia and more severe versus simple hyperplasia or less severe was 88.0%, K-unweighted±SE=0.72±0.07. CONCLUSIONS: Developing and prospectively testing a binary system of classifying endometrial hyperplasia on endometrial biopsy may aid efforts to improve interobserver reproducibility.
AB - BACKGROUND: Identifying which categories in the World Health Organization classification of endometrial hyperplasia contribute to suboptimal reproducibility is clinically important. METHODS: A 2-member panel reviewed 209 endometrial biopsy/curettage specimens originally diagnosed as incident endometrial hyperplasia as part of a progression study. Original diagnoses included the following: disordered proliferative endometrium, simple hyperplasia, complex hyperplasia, and atypical hyperplasia; panel diagnoses also included negative and carcinoma. We assessed percentage agreement and kappa statistics±standard errors (K±SE). RESULTS: Original and panel diagnoses (combining negative with disordered proliferative endometrium; atypical hyperplasia with carcinoma) agreed for 34.9% of biopsies (K-unweighted±SE=0.18±0.03; K-weighted±SE=0.27±0.04) . Panelists' diagnoses agreed (using 6 categories) for 51.7% of biopsies, corresponding to K-unweighted±SE=0.37±0.03, improving with weighting to K-weighted±SE=0.63±0.05. Reproducibility based on a 2-tier classification ([negative, disordered proliferative endometrium, simple hyperplasia, or complex hyperplasia] versus [atypical hyperplasia or carcinoma]) increased agreement between original and panel diagnoses to 82.8%, K-unweighted±SE=0.37±0.06, and between panelists to 87.0%, K-unweighted±SE=0.63±0.07. Agreement between panelists at a cutpoint of complex hyperplasia and more severe versus simple hyperplasia or less severe was 88.0%, K-unweighted±SE=0.72±0.07. CONCLUSIONS: Developing and prospectively testing a binary system of classifying endometrial hyperplasia on endometrial biopsy may aid efforts to improve interobserver reproducibility.
KW - Diagnosis
KW - Endometrium
KW - Hyperplasia
KW - Reproducibility
KW - WHO
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U2 - 10.1097/PGP.0b013e3181659167
DO - 10.1097/PGP.0b013e3181659167
M3 - Article
C2 - 18580308
AN - SCOPUS:50349101942
SN - 0277-1691
VL - 27
SP - 318
EP - 325
JO - International Journal of Gynecological Pathology
JF - International Journal of Gynecological Pathology
IS - 3
ER -