Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Radiology Cancer Staging Dr Gina Brown Radiologist Royal Marsden Hospital UK Cancers fulfilling criteria for standardised reporting • preoperative therapy and radical surgery is determined according to staging risk for selected high risk patients. • Radiological staging prevents unnecessary and potentially harmful preoperative over treatment in patients with good prognosis tumours • accuracy of detailed pre operative identification of key prognostic information by CT and/or MR has been validated against the histopathology gold standard • Documentation of baseline characteristics of tumour essential – esp if preoperative therapy is given • Reliable staging information can be provided to the clinical team at diagnosis Relevance of Cancer imaging • Individualise treatment according to both risk of local and distant failure • Weekly MDT meeting to review the imaging and clinical status of patients before making decisions about treatment. • Decisions made often take into account baseline staging features. T1 sm2/Sm1 Local excision? T1/T2 Primary TME surgery T2/T3a Primary TME surgery T3b Primary TME surgery T3c /T3d Preop Rx surgery T4/CRM Preop Rx Radical surgery Examples • Treatments offered based on preoperative imaging include primary surgery for tumours with absent poor prognostic factors pre operative chemoradiotherapy for patients with locally advanced tumours neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by potentially curative surgery for patients presenting with synchronous but resectable metastatic disease • wide implications for pre operative treatment it is crucial that this radiological staging information is clearly provided and documented Current practice • describe CT and MRI scan appearances of tumour providing what they consider the pertinent staging information in the form of a “freeform” text report which, although not standardised, represents the radiologist’s opinion of tumour appearance and extent. Histopathology model • The RCPath introduced minimum dataset reporting in 1997. Histopathological Assessment Code No: Pathology Reporting Form Patient’s Initials ….…… Pathologist………………… …/…./..… Date of Birth Surgeon………………………… Sex M Operation date F …/…./200.. Macroscopic Assessment - Mesorectum Has the patient received pre-op RT/CRT Yes No Specimen Grade Moderate Incomplete Anterior Posterior below …………the peritoneal reflection. Yes No Photograph of Sequential Slices Yes No Involvement of proximal/distal margin Yes No Histology Type: Yes No Differentiation: (By predominate type) Poor Well/Mod Complete Photograph Surfaces Tumour is above at Maximum tumour diameter …..mms Presence of tumour / wall perforation (pT4) Position of tumour (Please mark on diagram) Ant. quadrant Left lateral quadrant Post quadrant Right lateral quadrant Circumferential Distance to distal margin …..mms Adenocarcinoma ……………………………………………. Other tumour type (Please State) Local Invasion: Submucosa (pT1) Muscularis propria (pT2) Local invasion/peritoneal breach (pT4) Beyond Muscularis propria (pT3) Tumour perforation (pT4) …..mm Maximum extramural spread of tumour Minimum distance of tumour to CRM from outer edge of tumour .….mm Is the resection histologically complete (i.e. >1mm) ? No Yes Metastatic Spread No of Nodes examined Apical Node positive …….. No. of positive nodes Yes No …….. Histopathology proforma reporting • led to an improvement in the reporting of key prognostic factors by pathologists • circumferential resection margin reporting improved from 31% to 100% • minimum data set reporting of prognostic histopathological data in colorectal cancer is now the standard of care that enables highrisk patients to benefit from postoperative adjuvant therapy. Preoperative proforma? • Histopathology assessment of the resected specimen is clearly too late to influence preoperative treatment choices. • As with many solid tumours there is strong evidence that preoperative therapy benefits selected patients with colorectal cancer and selection is based on preoperative staging . • We hypothesise that a proforma based reporting system for radiology staging would be of value in enabling efficient identification of patients with pertinent risk factors. What should we expect to see on a staging report • • • • Assessment of tumour resectability Extent of tumour spread (using TNM) Metastatic spread Tumor specific prognostic factors e.g. extramural venous invasion and peritoneal disease. • The local staging and prognostic characteristics • Distant metastatic disease staging evaluated by imaging MRI high resolution Mesorectal fascia Slice 1 Slice 2 Distance to CRM vessels Slice 3 Slice 5 Depth of spread/mm Slice 4 Slice 6 Slice 1 Slice 2 Lymph nodes Slice 3 Slice 5 Slice 4 Slice 6 AUDIT • • We compared the documentation of staging information from the non proforma “freeform” report with the proforma reporting by radiologist 121 patients in total with 66 colon cancer patients evaluated by CT alone and 55 patients with rectal cancer evaluated by both CT and MRI MEASURES • The “freeform” non-proforma and proforma reports for each patient were independently analysed noting the explicit mention of minimum dataset prognostic factors. MEASURES • We measured the completeness of staging information by the same radiologist before and after introduction of proforma reporting in 100 patients Results of freeform reporting • This showed missing staging data in 118/121 (97.5%) of reports. • Information regarding the presence or absence of metastatic disease was missing in 90/121 (74.3%) of CT reports. • Rectal cancer margin status, which governs resectability, was missing in 40/55 (73%) of reports. Proforma reporting • Using proforma reporting, staging data was missing in 4/121 radiology reports (3.0%, p<0.001). • Rectal cancer margin status was missing in 2/55 (4%, p<0.001). Proforma reporting vs non-proforma reporting by the same specialist GI MDT review (CT staged tumours, N=45) Non-proforma Post-proforma 100 Percentage (%) of patients 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Prognostic Factor Proforma reporting vs non-proforma reporting by the same specialist GI MDT review (MRI staged tumours, N=55) Pre-proforma Post-proforma 100 Percentage (%) of patients 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 EMVI T stage N stage Prognostic factor M stage CRM Results • at best, only up to 20% of non proforma reports were complete; • improving to 98.2% complete when proforma reporting was introduced • highlights the benefit of proformabased reporting for the radiologist as a tool to generate a more comprehensive report. Summary • This lack of clear documentation could result in under treatment of the patient preoperatively • highlights the importance of explicitly stating validated prognostic factors • a simple proforma can achieve this and provides clear and consistent documentation for treatment rationales. • false negative assumptions would be minimised preventing understaging and therefore under treatment of patients. Advantages • Proforma reporting has further benefits for the MDT process. • Individual items are more clearly identified, focusing the attention of the MDM discussion and promoting more efficient meetings and decision making. • The process of proforma reporting may also highlight areas that radiologists find difficult to accurately detect, prompting the radiologist to seek training and support as well as feedback from histopathology colleagues. challenges • proforma reporting may be considered by some to be too restrictive • however, the radiologist always has the option of free text and can always recommend further MDT discussion – for clarification To improve quality of cancer care • Morris et al demonstrated an “unacceptable” variation in stoma rates between NHS trusts ranging from 8.5% to 52.6% but could not identify the reasons - proper documentation of height and stage of the tumours from pre-operative imaging would have made comparison of these APE rates more meaningful. • Universal adoption of proforma reporting would provide standardised comparisons to help in future national audits for objective comparisons between centres and treatment policies. RCR/NCIN Working Party for Cancer Reporting Radiology Working Group for Standards in Cancer Reporting RCR standard for cross sectional imaging in cancer management Special interest group (SIGS) STAKEHOLDERS: - Multi disciplinary sub– speciality Commission proforma reporting templates from Expert authors (RCR/NCIN) - NCRI CSG’s NCIN / connecting For health Evidence base for standards eg: MBUR7, NICE, CRAC Audit Approve and circulate the draft through the working group RCR Pilot - subspecialty experts eg: surgeons, pathologists and oncologists RCR led Pilot • A pilot of implementation of proforma reporting for cancers in • Colorectal • Prostate • Lung • Gynae malignancies Aim of pilot • Test feasibility and effectiveness of implementation of proforma reporting for cancers lung, gynaecological, colorectal, and prostate cancers Multicentre pilot of MDT Proforma Introduction • 10-15 UK centres – RCR call for pilot centres Data collection support Cancer reporting workshops RCR pilot centre status Objectives 1. Can standardised proforma reporting for cancer staging in the MDT setting can be achieved in multiple centres? 2. areas of difficulty in implementation - how are they overcome by the different centres? 3. Minimum data staging before and after proforma adoption 4. Impact/usefulness of support workshops and proforma completion notes 5. To receive feedback of the proformas from the MDT end users and adjustments from their use. 6. Appropriateness of detail in the proforma: clinical impacts/decision pathways 7. Compare our experience with the Ontario Cancer Care initiative and comparison of the equivalent evaluation forms for the participating centres in Ontario. Conclusion • gains from proforma based comprehensive radiology reporting will prevent inappropriate patient management, ineffective surgery and suboptimal patient outcomes. • proforma-based reporting should be universally adopted in the MDT setting, since it will enable the consistent and systematic identification of high risk patients for pre-operative therapies Working group: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Tony Nicholson: RCR Dean Dr Andrea Rockall (NCIN subspecialty lead for Gynae Oncology Radiology and RCR co-lead for Cancer Standards in Oncology Imaging) Dr Julie Olliff (RCR co-lead for Cancer Standards in Oncology Imaging) Dr Anwar Padhani (NCIN subspecialty lead for Prostate cancer radiology reports and RCR co-lead for Cancer Standards in Oncology Imaging) Dr Fergus Gleeson/Dr Sujal Desai (NCIN subspecialty leads for Lung cancer) Dr Ashley Guthrie (NCIN co-lead for Colorectal cancer) Dr Mick Peake (NCIN chair, National Lead for Lung Cancer, and Royal College of Physicians) Professor Paul Finan (National Lead for Colorectal Cancer, and Royal College of Surgeons), Dr Jem Rashbass (Royal College of Pathologists), Miss Hazel Beckett (Head of Professional Practice, RCR) Ms Gillian Dollamore (Executive Officer, Professional Standards Team, RCR) Mrs Nan Parkinson, (Faculties Administrator, RCR) Collaborators from Ontario Cancer Care, synoptic reporting project Dr Erin Kennedy (Project lead, Department of Surgery, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada) Mark Fruitman (Radiologist, Department of Radiology, St. Joseph's Health Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada) Laurent Milot (Radiologist, Department of Radiology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada)