Environmental pathology: new directions and opportunities. (1/348)

The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) supports a number of training programs for predoctoral and postdoctoral (D.V.M., M.D., Ph.D.) fellows in toxicology, epidemiology and biostatistics, and environmental pathology. At the Experimental Biology meeting in April 1997, the American Society of Investigative Pathology (ASIP) sponsored a workshop including directors, trainees, and other interested scientists from several environmental pathology programs in medical and veterinary colleges. This workshop and a related session on "Novel Cell Imaging Techniques for Detection of Cell Injury" revealed advances in molecular and cell imaging approaches as reviewed below that have a wide applicability to toxicologic pathology.  (+info)

Molecular pathology in the preclinical development of biopharmaceuticals. (2/348)

Advances in cell and molecular biology have engendered a wide range of techniques that can be used to study the molecular events that underlie the cause of disease, thus producing a new field of study called "molecular pathology." These techniques can be either slide-based or non-slide-based (solution-based). The slide-based techniques include immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and in situ polymerase chain reaction; pathologists play a unique role in the administration of these techniques because of their ability to interpret the end product (i.e., the slide). In this manuscript, we briefly discussed the use and impact of these slide-based techniques within all phases of drug development in the pharmaceutical industry.  (+info)

Realities of diagnosing Helicobacter pylori infection in clinical practice: a case for non-invasive indirect methodologies. (3/348)

BACKGROUND: The current, arbitrarily defined gold standard for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection requires histologic examination of two specially stained antral biopsy specimens. However, routine histology is potentially limited in general clinical practice by both sampling and observer error. The current study was designed to examine the diagnostic performance of invasive and non-invasive H. pylori detection methods that would likely be available in general clinical practice. METHODS: The diagnostic performance of rotating clinical pathology faculty using thiazine staining was compared with that of an expert gastrointestinal pathologist in 38 patients. In situ hybridization stains of adjacent biopsy cuts were also examined by the expert pathologist for further comparison. Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) analysis was performed to evaluate whether the diagnostic performance of the expert pathologist differed depending upon the histologic method employed. A similar analysis was made to evaluate the diagnostic performance of pathology trainees relative to the expert. In the absence of an established invasive gold standard, non-invasive testing methods (rapid serum antibodies, formal Elisa antibodies and carbon-14 urea breath testing) were evaluated in 74 patients by comparison with a gold standard defined using a combination of diagnostic tests. RESULTS: Using either rapid urease testing of biopsy specimens or urea breath testing as the gold standard for comparison, the diagnostic performance of the rotating clinical pathology faculty was inferior to that of the expert gastrointestinal pathologist especially with regard to specificity (e.g., 69 percent for the former versus 88 percent, with the latter relative to rapid urease testing). Although interpretation of in situ hybridization staining by the expert appeared to have an even higher specificity, ROC analysis failed to show a difference. The mean ROC areas for thiazine and in situ hybridization staining for trainee pathologists relative to the expert were 0.88 and 0.94, respectively. In untreated patients, urea breath testing had a sensitivity and specificity of 100 percent as compared with thiazine staining with a sensitivity of 83 percent and a specificity of 97 percent. Post-therapy, breath testing had a sensitivity of 100 percent but a specificity of only 86 percent as compared with invasive testing with a sensitivity and specificity of 100 percent. Rapid serum antibody testing and formal Elisa antibody testing agreed in 93 percent of cases (Kappa 0.78) with the rapid test being correct in three of the four disagreements. CONCLUSIONS: The current study illustrates a number of realities regarding H. pylori diagnosis. There is no diagnostic gold standard in general clinical practice. Accurate interpretation of specially stained slides is a learned activity with a tendency towards overdiagnosis early on. Urea breath testing is likely to be the diagnostic method of choice for untreated patients in general clinical practice although antibody testing is almost as accurate. Rapid antibody tests are at least as accurate as formal Elisa antibody tests. Urea breath testing is useful for confirming cure after therapy, but false-positive results may occur in some patients.  (+info)

The nomenclature of cell death: recommendations of an ad hoc Committee of the Society of Toxicologic Pathologists. (4/348)

The last several years have seen considerable confusion regarding the terms "apoptosis" and "necrosis" in pathology. This situation prompted the Society of Toxicologic Pathologists to charter the Committee on the Nomenclature of Cell Death, which was charged with making recommendations about the use of the terms "apoptosis" and "necrosis" in toxicity studies. The Committee recommends use of the term "necrosis" to describe findings comprising dead cells in histological sections, regardless of the pathway by which the cells died. The modifiers "apoptotic" and "oncotic" or "mixed apoptotic and oncotic" are recommended to specify the predominant morphological cell death pathway or pathways, when appropriate. Other standard modifiers, indicating the lesion distribution and severity, may also be used in conjunction with these. "Individual cell necrosis" (also known as "single cell necrosis") may be either of the apoptotic, oncotic, or mixed types. In many cases, more traditional terms such as "coagulation necrosis" may be used to convey a meaning similar to oncotic necrosis. It is important that pathologists use terms that accurately and concisely convey the level of information appropriate to the study's needs. Furthermore, toxicologic pathologists should actively help to disseminate these recommendations to other biologists and to regulatory authorities.  (+info)

A visual coding system in histopathology and its consensual acquisition. (5/348)

Divergent descriptions of histopathologic images induce inter- and intra-observer variability in diagnosis. Even though a controlled terminology exists to describe medical imaging, pathologists do not always agree on the visual representation of the descriptive terms. The main purpose of our work is to define a methodology to build a standardized visual coding system unambiguously characterizing the terms of a microglossary. The methodology follows two steps: 1) the acquisition of experts' descriptions of images using the microglossary and 2) a consensus derivation. The procedure was applied on a set of 85 histopathological images of breast tumors described by two experts. Among the 339 objects selected in images, 176 were detected by both experts, 77% localized at the same place and 25% also identically labeled. The microglossary was enriched and illustrated via the resulting consensual descriptions. The contribution of this work supports relevant indexing of biomedical images and image-related information.  (+info)

Preventative pathology and childhood injury. (6/348)

OBJECTIVE: To delineate a role for pathologists in coordinating the study of childhood deaths due to injury and in developing public safety recommendations. METHODS: Ongoing evaluation of cases of death due to injury occurring in children under 16 years, with formal review of all cases of fatal pediatric injuries recorded in the Department of Histopathology, Women's and Children's Hospital, over the past 35 years, has been undertaken as a part of the "Keeping Your Baby and Child Safe" programme. RESULTS: Information obtained from these cases has been used to formulate a number of safety recommendations dealing with unsafe sleeping environments, unsafe eating practices, scalding, and dangerous farm environments. Some products have been withdrawn from sale and other products modified. CONCLUSIONS: Pathologists often have extensive knowledge of childhood injuries, which can contribute significantly to health promotion initiatives and community education programmes.  (+info)

Review of the clinical activity of medical microbiologists in a teaching hospital. (7/348)

BACKGROUND: The clinical interactive role of medical microbiologists has been underestimated and the discipline is perceived as being confined to the laboratory. Previous studies have shown that most microbiology interaction takes place over the telephone. AIM: To determine the proportion of clinical ward based and laboratory based telephone interactions and specialties using a microbiology service. METHODS: Clinical microbiology activity that took place during November 1996 was prospectively analysed to determine the distribution of interactions and specialties using the service. RESULTS: In all, 1177 interactions were recorded, of which nearly one third (29%) took place at the bedside and 23% took place on call. Interactions involving the intensive treatment unit, general ward visits, and communication of positive blood cultures and antibiotic assays were the main areas of activity identified. There were 147 visits to 86 patients on the general wards during the study, with the number of visits to each individual varying from one to eight. The need for repeated visits reflected the severity of the underlying condition of the patients. Ward visits were regarded as essential to obtain missing clinical information, to assess response to treatment, and to make an appropriate entry in a patient's notes. CONCLUSIONS: Ward visits comprise a significant proportion of clinical microbiology interactions and have potential benefits for patient management, service utilisation, and education.  (+info)

Information before coronial necropsy: how much should be available? (8/348)

AIM: To assess the amount and quality of information supplied before undertaking a coroner's necropsy, based on the supposition that insufficient information may adversely affect the quality of the necropsy. METHODS: For a one year period (947 cases), sudden death reports from the coronial jurisdiction of South Yorkshire (West) were audited to assess the quality of information supplied. Seven specific items of information were sought: age, sex, occupation, date of death, location of the body, position of the body, date of last seeing a general practitioner, and relevant medical history. The results from necropsy and non-necropsy cases were compared. RESULTS: Only 22.1% of reports contained all seven items of information. There was no difference between the amount of information supplied in necropsy and non-necropsy cases except about when the general practitioner last saw the deceased. An occupational history was not available in 40.4% of all deaths. CONCLUSIONS: The quality of information supplied to the pathologist before necropsy may be suboptimal and could affect the thoroughness of the necropsy itself.  (+info)