Title: Quality of data in brain tumors
1Quality of data in brain tumors
Jerzy Slowinski
- 1) Department of Neurosurgery in Sosnowiec,
Medical University of Silesia - 2) Department of Epidemiology, School of Public
Health, Medical University of Silesia - Poland
2The Regional Silesia Cancer Registry
- One of the 16 population-based cancer registries
in Poland - Covers population living in the Silesia
Voivodeship (the second most populated region in
Poland)
3The Silesia Voivodeship
- The most urbanized and industrialized region in
Poland - 12 294 sq. km 4.7 million people
4WHO classification of brain tumors (2007)
- Tumors of neuroepithelial tissue
- Tumours of cranial and paraspinal nerves
- Tumours of the meninges
- Lymphomas and haematopoietic tumours
- Germ cell tumours
- Tumours of the sellar region
- Metastatic tumours
5Biological features of brain gliomas
- Diffuse, infiltrating growth
- Progression of the malignancy grade during the
growth of tumor - Tendency to recurrence
- Extraneural metastases extremely rare
- No lymph node involvement (no TNM staging)
62 months after tumor resection
3 months later
7Issues potentially relevant to quality of
epidemiological data on brain and CNS tumors
- Classification
- Grading
- Ascertainment
- Completeness of registration
- Microscopic verification
- Reliability of histological diagnosis
- Differences in diagnostic capabilities between
countries and regions (detection bias)
8Classification, criteria
- Bailey, Cushing, 1929 stages of cytogenesis
- Kernohan, Sayre, 1951 degree of
dedifferentiation - WHO classification
- 1979 (K. Zülch)
- 1993
- 2000
- 2007
Harvey Cushing
9WHO classification of brain tumors
WHO 2000, 2007
WHO 1993
- Tumors of neuroepithelial tissue
- Tumors of cranial and paraspinal nerves
- Tumors of the meninges
- Lymphomas and haematopoietic tumours
- Germ cell tumors
- Tumors of the sellar region
- Metastatic tumors
Cysts and tumor-like lesions Local extensions
from regional tumors Unclassified tumors
10Grading of astrocytic tumors
- Kernohan
- Ringertz
- St. Anne-Mayo
- WHO
four-tiered
three-tiered
11WHO grade vs. ICD-O-3 code
WHO
ICD-O-3
0 benign 1- borderline or uncertain behaviour 2
in situ not applicable 3 - malignant
I II III IV
low-grade
high-grade
12WHO
ICD-O-3
Choroid plexus papilloma I 0 Pilocytic
astrocytoma I 1 Central neurocytoma II 1 Diff
use astrocytoma II 3 Anaplastic
astrocytoma III 3 Glioblastoma IV 3
No strict linkage between WHO and ICD-O-3
13Multidisciplinary agreement on a standard
definition of brain tumors for collecting and
comparing data
Neuro-Oncology 2002 4 134-145.
14Ascertainment
- Complete ascertainment is a key issue with regard
to data quality
UNDERASCERTAINMENT
UNDERREPORTING (the number of cases not
identified)
DEFINITIONAL DIFFERENCES (cases eligible for
inclusion)
15Ascertainment
- Autopsy rate (incidental autopsy cases)
- Case definition
- Resolution of duplicate cases
- Inclusion of benign tumors
- Shift from in-patient to out-patient settings
16Completeness of registration
- Alarming underregistration of brain tumors by
many registries - 52 of cases identified in the cancer registry in
Devon and Cornwall (Pobereskin LH. Eur J Epidem
2001 17 413). - 54 in the Scottish Cancer Registry (Counsell CE
et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psych 1997 63 94).
17Crude incidence and mortality rates, and
mortality/incidence index for brain tumors
18Death Certificate Only (DCO)
- Finland, Denmark 1
- Czech Republic 10
- Poland 15
- Portugal 20
Parkin DM et al. Cancer incidence in five
continents. IARC, Lyon 2002.
19Microscopic verification
- Europe 70
- Switzerland 100
- Finland, Sweden, Austria gt90
- Poland 52
- The Silesia Voivodeship 59 (RSCR 2005)
EUROCARE-3, 1990-19941
1Sant M et al. Ann Oncol 2003 14 (Suppl.5)
v61-v118.
20Reasons for the lack of microscopic verification
- No follow-up
- Patient refusal
- Inoperable tumor
- Inadequate availability of stereotactic
procedures - Low autopsy rate
21Reliability of histological diagnosis
Pathologist
Laboratory
Tissue
22Reliability of histological diagnosis
- The complex nosology and pathology of the CNS
tumors - Definitions for certain tumor types imprecise,
rely on subjective criteria - Surgical pathologists not familiar with the CNS
malignancies (RARE CANCER) - Inter-observer concordance rate ranges from 20-86
23Concordance rates () between neuropathologists
and cancer registry data
Nosologists agree with registry (n326) 3 of 3 neuropathologists agree with registry (n204)
Exact ICD-O histology coding 88 49
General histology grouping 96 81
Tumor type
Astrocytoma/Glioblastoma 95 52
Oligodendroglioma 92 40
Medulloblastoma 100 58
Schwannoma 100 89
Meningioma 97 95
Mixed glioma 57 0
Castillo MS et al. Neuroepidemiology
20042385-93.
24Proposals I
- The unique case ascertainment rules
- The unique classification and grading system
(conversion to ICD-O-3 according to the Consensus
Criteria) - Encourage training in diagnostic neuropathology
- Putting more efforts into obtaining the material
for tissue diagnosis (stereotactic brain biopsy)
25Proposals II
- Include benign tumors (consistent with EUROCARE-5
Plenary Meeting proposal) - Check the clinical data for the precise tumor
site and other useful information - Collect data on diagnostic and therapeutic
procedures for HR studies - In the future, better delineation of tumor
subtypes based on a molecular profile of tumor
cells
26Thank you!
27Advances in surgical therapy
- modern neuroimaging (fMRI, MRS, fiber tracking,
PET) - microsurgery
- skull-base surgical approaches
- intraoperative monitoring (evoked potentials,
cranial nerves monitoring , ECoG) - endoscopic techniques
- stereotactic techniques
- neuronavigation
28Deletions in 1p and 19q
29(No Transcript)
30Astrocytoma, G I
31Astrocytoma, G II
32Glioblastoma, G IV
33Glioblastoma, G IV
34Classification and therapeutic issues
- relative RT and CHT resistance
- even low-grade tumors are life-threatening
(biological malignancy) - no widely accepted staging system
- no in situ tumors