Popular Articles

California's Struggle With Insurance Exchanges Offers Lesson For National Reform
California"s experience with insurance exchanges could prove a valuable lesson for the nation"s flirtation with such pools for covering large numbers of people, The Wall Street Journal reports.
generic viagra online
Researchers From CIC BioGUNE Have Found A Way To Treat Ischemic Pathologies
A team of researchers from CIC bioGUNE from the Cellular Biology and Stem Cell Unit, alongside a team from Paris" Cardiovascular Research Centre (INSERM U970) have developed a new area of research which looks extremely promising as regards the development of new therapeutic responses to ischemic pathologies and cardiovascular diseases in general. The results of this research project, which was initiated in 2005 and is supported by Bizkaia:Xede and the Basque Government"s Etortek programme, were published in the prestigious scientific journal Circulation.
News of the day
Lou Gehrig's Disease Drug Tested In Melanoma
Following evidence of tumor shrinkage in a recent clinical trial at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey (CINJ), new research has just begun to further measure the effects of a drug commonly used for Lou Gehrig"s disease (ALS) in the treatment of melanoma. CINJ is a center of excellence of UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
Oncology

Revised Vienna Classification For Diagnosing Colorectal Epithelial Neoplasias

Considerable discrepancies have been reported between diagnoses of colorectal epithelial neoplastic lesions made by Western and Japanese pathologists from endoscopic cold biopsies and resected specimens of the same lesions To overcome the differences between the conventional Western criteria and the Japanese Group Classification (JGC), the Vienna Classification (VC) attempted to combine the basic concepts of the conventional Western criteria, which emphasizes that invasion is an indicator of metastatic potential, with the strong points of the JGC, which values consistency between diagnoses from cold biopsies and resected specimens. In the revised Vienna Classification (rVC), histopathologic diagnoses are classified into five categories according to neoplastic severity and depth of invasion. It also distinguishes between epithelial neoplastic lesions limited to the mucosa and those invading the submucosa. To examine the efficacy of the rVC for diagnosing colorectal polyps ò‰¥ 10 mm, and colorectal lesions suspected of being carcinomas invasive to the submucosa or beyond, including strictures, the research team led Tominaga K prospectively compared the diagnoses from cold biopsy specimens using the rVC guidelines with the diagnoses from resected specimens of the same lesions using the World Health Organization classification. A total of 179 lesions were identified. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the rVC for distinguishing between intramucosal lesions and submucosal invasive carcinomas in cold biopsy specimens was 22.2%, 100%, 100%, and 71.4%, respectively, and for distinguishing between intramucosal lesions and those invading the submucosa or beyond was 59.7%, 100%, 100%, and 37.6%, respectively. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the JGC for distinguishing between intramucosal lesions and submucosal invasive carcinomas in cold biopsy specimens was 83.3%, 91.4%, 83.3%, and 91.4%, respectively, and for distinguishing between intramucosal lesions and those invading the submucosa or beyond was 95.1%, 91.4%, 97.9%, and 82.1%, respectively. A total of 137 of 144 carcinomas that had invaded the submucosa or beyond and three high-grade intraepithelial neoplasias were diagnosed as "carcinoma" using the JGC system. The use of the rVC guidelines for cold biopsy specimens has a high positive predictive value in diagnosing carcinomas invasive to the colorectal submucosa or beyond. However, it is of limited value in predicting the depth of invasion assigned to the resected specimens, especially for the diagnosis of submucosal invasive carcinomas. This should be supplemented by endoscopic assessment of the depth of invasion. Diagnostic discrepancies do not matter to patients if Western and Japanese physicians understand the implications of their respective pathology reports and apply management strategies that are appropriate to the needs of their patients. However, continued attempts to unify Western and Japanese reporting systems are desirable because merging the terminologies of these systems will help codify the advantages of each into a language that is universally understood. The rVC of colorectal epithelial neoplastic lesions seeks to be more closely in tune patient management, however, it should be emphasized that cold biopsy-based diagnoses are subject to the limitations of superficiality and sampling errors. Reference: Tominaga K, Fujinuma S, Endo T, Saida Y, Takahashi K, Maetani I. Efficacy of the revised Vienna Classification for diagnosing colorectal epithelial neoplasias. World J Gastroenterol 2009; 15(19): 2351-2356 Correspondence to: Kenji Tominaga, Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, Toho University Ohashi Medical Center, 2-17-6 Ohashi, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8515, Japan. Jian-Xia Cheng World Journal of Gastroenterology


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):