Twenty consecutive cases of melanocytic lesions were chosen from the archives of the archives of the institute of Anatomic Pathology at Santa Chiara Hospital, Trento. Representative images were acquired at a spatial resolution of 512 x 512 pixels, saved in IPEG format and delivered to the remote pathologist by multimedia internet electronic mail. Six cases were diagnosed as benign melanocytic lesions by the local pathologist. Of the 20 cases transmitted, each with an average of 5.3 images, the remote pathologist suggested a diagnosis of malignancy in nine cases while 10 cases were thought to be benign. In one case the images were not considered sufficient for diagnosis. Overall, the diagnostic agreement between local and remote pathologist was 79% (kappa = 0.58, P = 0.002). This preliminary study suggest that telepathology by internet electronic mail can be a valuable tool for remote consultation in dematopathology, as well as for other diagnostic fields where expert consultation is necessary.
Proficiency testing programmes for measuring screening skills in pathology are mainly conducted using conventional glass microscope slides. However, the availability of robotic microscopes allows an entire conventional slide to be digitized. Our experiments have shown that, using a widely available robotized microscope and a PC, the image of a single field may be acquired in 2 s on average, including stage movements, autofocus and storage. Digitizing an entire slide, a fully automated procedure, takes up to 8 h. If the image of each field is compressed at an appropriate quality level (a compression ratio of, say, 35:1) it requires about 40 kByte to be stored, resulting in a total storage requirement of about 600 MByte per slide. Thus one CD-ROM can be used to store one virtual slide, as well as a self-installing program to provide a microscope simulator facility. This allows pathologists to examine the virtual case from their computer in a similar manner to looking at a glass slide on a conventional microscope. This permits a new, computer-based approach to proficiency testing in histopathology and cytopathology. Use of virtual slides should encourage the diffusion of national quality assurance programmes, which at present suffer from certain organizational and logistical limitations.
The feasibility of using the Internet for remote pathology consultation was examined. We assessed the diagnostic agreement between two groups of pathologists who independently evaluated histopathological cases exchanged by Internet electronic mail. The exchange was between two different workstations using readily available software not specifically developed for telemedicine. Data and images from 76 cases were transmitted to four pathologists. An average of 4.5 images per case were transmitted at compression ratios of between 6:1 and 40:1, corresponding to 250 kByte of data per case. In two cases the remote pathologists could not make a diagnosis. Agreement was reached in 63 of the other 74 (kappa = 0.79). In 11 cases (15%) there was a misdiagnosis. However, the results are encouraging and suggest that Internet electronic mail can be used successfully for remote consultation in pathology.
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