TY - JOUR
T1 - Ovarian tumor frozen section, a multidisciplinary affair
AU - Asp, Mihaela
AU - Peber, Ebba
AU - Kannisto, Päivi
AU - Måsbäck, Anna
AU - Malander, Susanne
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - BackgroundOvarian Cancer (OC) constitute the eighth most common cancers among women worldwide. Surgery remains the cornerstone in the management of OC. Intraoperative frozen section (FS) diagnosis is widely used to decide the surgery course. We aimed to assess the reliability of intraoperative FS diagnosis for treatment planning of patients with suspected OC from a multidisciplinary perspective. The clinical consequences of reclassification and the multidisciplinary management of the therapy plan, is the secondary aim of this study. To our knowledge, this information is sparely investigated.MethodsA single-center, retrospective population-based study of patients who underwent surgery for suspected OC between 2018 and 2020. Histopathological outcomes were classified as benign, borderline, or malignant. The FS diagnosis was the diagnostic test, and the final histopathology report was the gold standard. Diagnostic capability for treatment planning was assessed, and modifications made possible by overall clinical knowledge were discussed.ResultsA total of 358 patients were identified, of whom 187 were included in the FS group. Overall accuracy was 89.8%, and 19 patients were reclassified; the malignancy grade of 15 tumors was underestimated. Prevalence, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for invasive malignancies on FS were 54.0% (CI 46.6–61.3%), 88.1% (CI 80.2–93.7%), 98.8% (CI 93.7–99.9%), 98.9% (CI 92.7–99.8%), and 87.6% (CI 80.6–92.4%), respectively. Tumors incorrectly graded by FS tended to be of borderline-related.ConclusionsThe reliability of the FS methodology was an accurate test to help perform appropriate surgery and plan swift oncological treatment. FS is a reliable method to diagnose invasive malignancies and benign pathology. The communication between the pathologist, surgeon, and medical oncologist is highly important for both intraoperative decision-making and postoperative patient care.
AB - BackgroundOvarian Cancer (OC) constitute the eighth most common cancers among women worldwide. Surgery remains the cornerstone in the management of OC. Intraoperative frozen section (FS) diagnosis is widely used to decide the surgery course. We aimed to assess the reliability of intraoperative FS diagnosis for treatment planning of patients with suspected OC from a multidisciplinary perspective. The clinical consequences of reclassification and the multidisciplinary management of the therapy plan, is the secondary aim of this study. To our knowledge, this information is sparely investigated.MethodsA single-center, retrospective population-based study of patients who underwent surgery for suspected OC between 2018 and 2020. Histopathological outcomes were classified as benign, borderline, or malignant. The FS diagnosis was the diagnostic test, and the final histopathology report was the gold standard. Diagnostic capability for treatment planning was assessed, and modifications made possible by overall clinical knowledge were discussed.ResultsA total of 358 patients were identified, of whom 187 were included in the FS group. Overall accuracy was 89.8%, and 19 patients were reclassified; the malignancy grade of 15 tumors was underestimated. Prevalence, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for invasive malignancies on FS were 54.0% (CI 46.6–61.3%), 88.1% (CI 80.2–93.7%), 98.8% (CI 93.7–99.9%), 98.9% (CI 92.7–99.8%), and 87.6% (CI 80.6–92.4%), respectively. Tumors incorrectly graded by FS tended to be of borderline-related.ConclusionsThe reliability of the FS methodology was an accurate test to help perform appropriate surgery and plan swift oncological treatment. FS is a reliable method to diagnose invasive malignancies and benign pathology. The communication between the pathologist, surgeon, and medical oncologist is highly important for both intraoperative decision-making and postoperative patient care.
KW - Accuracy
KW - borderline tumors
KW - A frozen section
KW - ovarian cancer
KW - Multidisciplinary
U2 - 10.1080/0284186X.2022.2076257
DO - 10.1080/0284186X.2022.2076257
M3 - Article
C2 - 35611589
SN - 1651-226X
VL - 61
SP - 785
EP - 792
JO - Acta Oncologica
JF - Acta Oncologica
IS - 7
ER -