Improving care in ovarian cancer: the role of a clinico-pathological meeting

Ganesan, Prasanth ; Kumar, Lalit ; Hariprasad, Roopa ; Gupta, Aarti ; Dawar, R. ; Vijayaraghavan, M. (2008) Improving care in ovarian cancer: the role of a clinico-pathological meeting The National Medical Journal of India, 21 (5). pp. 225-227. ISSN 0970-258X

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Abstract

Background. We assessed the impact of clinico-pathological meetings on the diagnosis and management of patients with ovarian cancer. Methods. Between January 2005 and December 2006, about 400 patients of suspected or confirmed ovarian cancer were evaluated in the 'Gynaecology Tumour Clinic'. Of these, 108 cases were referred for discussion in the weekly clinicopathology meeting for various indications. These cases were retrospectively analysed regarding their initial clinical and pathological diagnosis, the indication for referring the case for discussion in the meeting and the impact this had on the overall management. Alterations in diagnosis, which impacted management, were classified as 'major changes' and those, which did not, were called 'minor changes'. Results. Ninety-one of the 108 cases discussed were available for analysis; 75.8% of cases were initially diagnosed as epithelial ovarian cancers. In 48 of 91 cases (52%), there was an alteration in the diagnosis as a direct result of discussion in the meeting, mainly after clarifications regarding histological grading in 34 cases. Of the remaining 14 cases, 3 had a change in histopathological diagnosis; 2 cases, which were initially labelled as undifferentiated tumours, had their diagnosis clarified; and in the remaining 9 cases, in which the primary site was not known, a possible primary site could be assigned (with the help of clinical, radiological and pathological inputs). Among the 14 cases with alterations other than grading, the change was contributed by slide review alone in 7 cases and in the rest by a combination of slide review and clinical inputs. As a direct outcome of the meeting, 20 of 91 cases (22%) had their management plan modified (major change). Conclusion. The practice of conducting weekly clinicopathological meetings has a major impact on the management of cases of ovarian cancer.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to All India Institute of Medical Sciences.
ID Code:66786
Deposited On:27 Oct 2011 06:39
Last Modified:18 May 2016 14:10

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