Waite Kristin A, Cioffi Gino, Kruchko Carol, Patil Nirav, Brat Daniel J, Bruner Janet M, McLendon Roger E, Tihan Tarik, Ostrom Quinn T, Barnholtz-Sloan Jill S
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, Trans-Divisional Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS), Hinsdale, Illinois, USA.
Neurooncol Pract. 2022 Mar 24;9(4):317-327. doi: 10.1093/nop/npac025. eCollection 2022 Aug.
The Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS) uses a histology grouping model based on the World Health Organization (WHO) classifications to group records for clinically relevant statistical reporting. Newly identified genetic markers more accurately stratify patients than histology alone and were incorporated into the 2016 update to the WHO Classification.
CBTRUS and consulting neuropathologists reviewed and aligned histology groupings with the 2016 WHO update. "Obsolete" (terms not currently in use) histology nomenclature along with their International Classification of Disease, Oncology 3rd edition (ICD-O-3) codes were identified, some histologies were reclassified to 2016 WHO, and new codes found in 2016 WHO were incorporated. An evaluation of the frequency of histology codes affected in the realignment process, and incidence and survival pre- and post-realignment was conducted.
After review, 67 codes were noted as obsolete, 51 codes were reclassified, and 12 new codes were incorporated. Histology groups most affected were mesenchymal tumors and neuronal/mixed neuronal-glial tumors. Reorganization resulted in 2588 (0.65%) cases with grouping reassignment or reporting change, indicating that the 2016 WHO Classification revision has impacted the collection and reporting of primary brain and other CNS tumors.
This work demonstrates the need to be responsive to changes in classification and coding in order to ensure the most up-to-date and accurate statistics for brain and CNS tumors. This will require collaboration from all stakeholders within the brain tumor community, so to have the ability to reconcile clinical practices and surveillance requirements.
美国中枢脑肿瘤登记处(CBTRUS)使用基于世界卫生组织(WHO)分类的组织学分组模型对记录进行分组,以进行临床相关的统计报告。新发现的基因标记比单纯的组织学更能准确地对患者进行分层,并已纳入2016年WHO分类更新中。
CBTRUS和咨询神经病理学家审查了组织学分组,并使其与2016年WHO更新保持一致。识别出“过时的”(当前未使用的术语)组织学命名法及其国际疾病分类肿瘤学第3版(ICD-O-3)编码,一些组织学被重新分类为2016年WHO分类,并且纳入了2016年WHO中发现的新编码。对重新调整过程中受影响的组织学编码频率以及重新调整前后的发病率和生存率进行了评估。
审查后,67个编码被标记为过时,51个编码被重新分类,12个新编码被纳入。受影响最大的组织学组是间充质肿瘤和神经元/混合神经元-胶质肿瘤。重组导致2588例(0.65%)病例的分组重新分配或报告变更,表明2016年WHO分类修订对原发性脑肿瘤和其他中枢神经系统肿瘤的收集和报告产生了影响。
这项工作表明需要对分类和编码的变化做出响应,以确保获得关于脑肿瘤和中枢神经系统肿瘤的最新、准确统计数据。这将需要脑肿瘤领域所有利益相关者的合作,以便能够协调临床实践和监测要求。