Reliability of diagnosis from Mohs slides: interpersonal and intrapersonal agreement on basal cell carcinoma presence and histological subtype

C. B. van Lee, E. E. F. Ip Vai Ching, K. Nasserinejad, H. A. M. Neumann, M.G.W. Bol, P. K. Dikrama, N. W. J. Kelleners-Smeets, S. Koljenovic, K. Munte, V. Noordhoek Hegt, H. C. de Vijlder, T. Nijsten, R. R. van den Bos*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background The success of Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) depends partly on the correct diagnosis of slides. ObjectivesTo determine reliability of diagnosis from Mohs slides. MethodsThis was a prospective study evaluating the reliability of diagnosis from Mohs slides of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) presence, BCC location on the slide and BCC subtype among six raters who independently assessed 50 Mohs slides twice with a 2-month interval. Slides were randomly selected whereby difficult-to-diagnose slides were oversampled. For each slide, a reference diagnosis was established by an expert panel. Cohen's kappa () was calculated to determine levels of agreement interpersonally (rater vs. reference diagnosis) and intrapersonally (rater at T1 vs. T2). Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine independent risk factors for slides with interpersonal discordant diagnosis. The variables studied were BCC presence, whether a slide was scored as easy or difficult to diagnose, review duration of the 50 slides, profession and years of experience in diagnosis from Mohs slides. ResultsInterpersonal and intrapersonal agreement were substantial on BCC presence ( = 066 and 068) and moderate on BCC subtype ( = 045 and 055). Slides that were scored as difficult to diagnose were an independent risk factor for interpersonal discordant diagnosis on BCC presence (odds ratio 354, 95% confidence interval 181-684). ConclusionsReliability of diagnosis from Mohs slides was substantial on BCC presence and moderate on BCC subtype. For slides that are scored difficult to diagnose, a second opinion is recommended to prevent misinterpretation and thereby recurrence of skin cancer.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)549-554
JournalBritish Journal of Dermatology
Volume175
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2016

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