Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma: a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma : a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS). / Woehrer, Adelheid; Kristensen, Bjarne W; Vital, Anne; Hainfellner, Johannes A.

I: Clinical Neuropathology, Bind 36 (2017), Nr. 1, 2017, s. 5-14.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Woehrer, A, Kristensen, BW, Vital, A & Hainfellner, JA 2017, 'Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma: a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS)', Clinical Neuropathology, bind 36 (2017), nr. 1, s. 5-14. https://doi.org/10.5414/NP301009

APA

Woehrer, A., Kristensen, B. W., Vital, A., & Hainfellner, J. A. (2017). Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma: a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS). Clinical Neuropathology, 36 (2017)(1), 5-14. https://doi.org/10.5414/NP301009

Vancouver

Woehrer A, Kristensen BW, Vital A, Hainfellner JA. Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma: a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS). Clinical Neuropathology. 2017;36 (2017)(1):5-14. https://doi.org/10.5414/NP301009

Author

Woehrer, Adelheid ; Kristensen, Bjarne W ; Vital, Anne ; Hainfellner, Johannes A. / Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma : a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS). I: Clinical Neuropathology. 2017 ; Bind 36 (2017), Nr. 1. s. 5-14.

Bibtex

@article{b8ce61c19a1745ef8b05e8a21349b68f,
title = "Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma: a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS)",
abstract = "The 2016 update of the WHO classification has introduced an integrated diagnostic approach that incorporates both tumor morphology and molecular information. This conceptual change has far-reaching implications, especially for neuropathologists who are in the forefront of translating molecular markers to routine diagnostic use. Adult diffuse glioma is a prototypic example for a group of tumors that underwent substantial regrouping, and it represents a major workload for surgical neuropathologists. Hence, we conducted a survey among members of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS) in order to assess 1) the extent to which molecular markers have already been incorporated in glioma diagnoses, 2) which molecular techniques are in daily use, and 3) to set a baseline for future surveys in this field. Based on 130 responses from participants across 40 nations neuropathologists uniformly rate molecular marker testing as highly relevant and already incorporate molecular information in their diagnostic assessments. At the same time however, the survey documents substantial differences in access to crucial biomarkers and molecular techniques across geographic regions and within individual countries. Concerns are raised concerning the validity of test assays with MGMT, 1p19q, and ATRX; being perceived as most problematic. Neuropathologists advocate the need for international harmonization of standards and consensus guidelines, and the majority is willing to actively engage in interlaboratory trials aiming at quality control (Figure 1).
.",
author = "Adelheid Woehrer and Kristensen, {Bjarne W} and Anne Vital and Hainfellner, {Johannes A}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.5414/NP301009",
language = "English",
volume = "36 (2017)",
pages = "5--14",
journal = "Clinical Neuropathology",
issn = "0722-5091",
publisher = "Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patterns of diagnostic marker assessment in adult diffuse glioma

T2 - a survey of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS)

AU - Woehrer, Adelheid

AU - Kristensen, Bjarne W

AU - Vital, Anne

AU - Hainfellner, Johannes A

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The 2016 update of the WHO classification has introduced an integrated diagnostic approach that incorporates both tumor morphology and molecular information. This conceptual change has far-reaching implications, especially for neuropathologists who are in the forefront of translating molecular markers to routine diagnostic use. Adult diffuse glioma is a prototypic example for a group of tumors that underwent substantial regrouping, and it represents a major workload for surgical neuropathologists. Hence, we conducted a survey among members of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS) in order to assess 1) the extent to which molecular markers have already been incorporated in glioma diagnoses, 2) which molecular techniques are in daily use, and 3) to set a baseline for future surveys in this field. Based on 130 responses from participants across 40 nations neuropathologists uniformly rate molecular marker testing as highly relevant and already incorporate molecular information in their diagnostic assessments. At the same time however, the survey documents substantial differences in access to crucial biomarkers and molecular techniques across geographic regions and within individual countries. Concerns are raised concerning the validity of test assays with MGMT, 1p19q, and ATRX; being perceived as most problematic. Neuropathologists advocate the need for international harmonization of standards and consensus guidelines, and the majority is willing to actively engage in interlaboratory trials aiming at quality control (Figure 1).
.

AB - The 2016 update of the WHO classification has introduced an integrated diagnostic approach that incorporates both tumor morphology and molecular information. This conceptual change has far-reaching implications, especially for neuropathologists who are in the forefront of translating molecular markers to routine diagnostic use. Adult diffuse glioma is a prototypic example for a group of tumors that underwent substantial regrouping, and it represents a major workload for surgical neuropathologists. Hence, we conducted a survey among members of the European Confederation of Neuropathological Societies (Euro-CNS) in order to assess 1) the extent to which molecular markers have already been incorporated in glioma diagnoses, 2) which molecular techniques are in daily use, and 3) to set a baseline for future surveys in this field. Based on 130 responses from participants across 40 nations neuropathologists uniformly rate molecular marker testing as highly relevant and already incorporate molecular information in their diagnostic assessments. At the same time however, the survey documents substantial differences in access to crucial biomarkers and molecular techniques across geographic regions and within individual countries. Concerns are raised concerning the validity of test assays with MGMT, 1p19q, and ATRX; being perceived as most problematic. Neuropathologists advocate the need for international harmonization of standards and consensus guidelines, and the majority is willing to actively engage in interlaboratory trials aiming at quality control (Figure 1).
.

U2 - 10.5414/NP301009

DO - 10.5414/NP301009

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27966427

VL - 36 (2017)

SP - 5

EP - 14

JO - Clinical Neuropathology

JF - Clinical Neuropathology

SN - 0722-5091

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 364506064