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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Interobserver Agreement Using Histological Scoring of the Canine Liver.

Journal:
Journal of veterinary internal medicine
Year:
2017
Authors:
Lidbury, J A et al.
Affiliation:
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences · United States
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Researchers looked at how consistently different veterinary pathologists could agree on the level of liver damage in dogs with chronic hepatitis (inflammation of the liver). They studied liver tissue samples from 50 dogs and found that the pathologists had a fair level of agreement when scoring fibrosis (scarring of the liver) but a poor level of agreement when scoring necroinflammatory activity (damage and inflammation in the liver). The study also showed that there was no significant difference in the scores given to liver samples stained with two different methods. This means that when veterinarians are interpreting liver histology reports, they should be aware of the variability in scoring and consider having more than one pathologist review the samples to get a clearer picture.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Grading schemes for the assessment of hepatic fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity in humans previously have been applied to dogs with chronic hepatitis. Interobserver agreement is a desirable characteristic for any histological scoring scheme. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To assess interobserver agreement associated with pathologists using a previously published histological scoring scheme to assess hepatic fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity in dogs and to compare fibrosis scores assigned to serial sections stained with hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) and picrosirius red. ANIMALS: Histological sections of liver from 50 dogs with variable degrees of hepatic fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity were selected from institutional tissue archives. METHODS: Six board-certified veterinary anatomic pathologists assigned fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity scores to the histological sections. The multiuser kappa statistic was calculated to assess interobserver agreement. Fibrosis stage assigned to serial sections stained with picrosirius red and H&E was compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. RESULTS: Multiuser kappa statistics for assessment of fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity from H&E-stained sections were 0.35 and 0.16, respectively. There was no difference in median fibrosis scores assigned to serial section stained with H&E and picrosirius red (P = .248). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: There was fair interobserver agreement when pathologists assessed fibrosis and poor agreement when they assessed necroinflammatory activity. This suboptimal agreement must be taken into account by clinicians making decisions based on histology reports of the liver and in the design of studies evaluating these findings. To decrease this variability, ideally >1 pathologist should evaluate each section.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28295598/