Cytotechnologist performance for detecting nuclear atypia in indeterminate thyroid fine needle aspirates.

Acta Cytol

Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Md., USA.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the performance of cytotechnologists in screening for nuclear atypia in thyroid fine needle aspiration (FNA) samples, given the rise in thyroid cases.
  • The analysis involved reviewing 8,814 thyroid cytopathology cases over a decade, focusing on atypia and suspicious features, while comparing diagnoses from cytotechnologists and cytopathologists.
  • Results showed a discrepancy rate of less than 10%, mainly one-category discrepancies related to cytotechnologist experience, suggesting effective screening quality for nuclear atypia in thyroid FNAs.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The thyroid gland is arguably the fastest growing anatomic site for fine needle aspiration (FNA). With the increase of thyroid cases, a reevaluation of cytotechnologist screening quality metrics in terms of thyroid FNA is called for. We present our institutional cytotechnologist performance at screening for nuclear atypia by applying established quality metrics.

Materials And Methods: Information on 8,814 consecutive thyroid cytopathology cases over a 10-year period was retrieved from computerized records. A subsample of cases categorized either as atypia of uncertain significance with nuclear atypia or suspicious for malignancy with features suspicious for papillary thyroid carcinoma. The cytotechnologist and cytopathologist diagnoses were compared using step discrepancies and Δ-ratios.

Results: Overall discrepancy between the cytotechnologist and cytopathologist diagnoses existed in <10% of all thyroid cases. One-category discrepancies were the most common (7.8%), while two-category discrepancies were rare (0.5%). The one-category discrepancy rate correlated with cytotechnologist experience. One-category under calls were twice as common as over calls (5.3 vs. 2.5%, p < 0.0001).

Conclusions: We identified a high level of quality in the screening for nuclear atypia in thyroid FNA. The one-category discrepancy rate is suited to tracking individual cytotechnologist performance, identifies outliers and appears to correlate with cytotechnologist experience.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000362681DOI Listing

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