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Grading keratinocyte atypia in actinic keratosis: a correlation of reflectance confocal microscopy and histopathology
Author(s) -
Pellacani G.,
Ulrich M.,
Casari A.,
Prow T.W.,
Cannillo F.,
Benati E.,
Losi A.,
Cesinaro A.M.,
Longo C.,
Argenziano G.,
Soyer H.P.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the european academy of dermatology and venereology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.655
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1468-3083
pISSN - 0926-9959
DOI - 10.1111/jdv.13215
Subject(s) - medicine , actinic keratosis , atypia , histopathology , grading (engineering) , dermatology , confocal microscopy , pathology , keratosis , confocal , microscopy , optics , basal cell , civil engineering , physics , engineering
Abstract Background Actinic Keratosis ( AK ) is the clinical manifestation of cutaneous dysplasia of epidermal keratinocytes, with progressive trend towards squamous cell carcinoma. Objective To evaluate the strength of the correlation between keratinocyte atypia, as detected by Reflectance Confocal Microscopy ( RCM ) and histopathology, and to develop a more objective atypia grading scale for RCM quantification, through a discrete ranking. Methods A total of 48 AK s and two control areas (photodamaged and non‐photodamaged skin) were selected for this study. All these areas were documented by RCM and biopsied for histopathology. One representative image of the epidermis was selected for RCM and for histopathology and used for side‐by‐side comparison with purpose written software. The assessor chose which of two images displayed more keratinocyte atypia, and an ordered list from the image showing the least to the most keratinocyte atypia was generated. Three evaluations were obtained for RCM and two for histopathology. Results Good interobserver correlation was obtained for RCM and histopathology grading, with high concordance between RCM and histopathology grading. Conclusions Expert rater scan consistently distinguish different grades of cytological atypia. Non‐invasive RCM data from in vivo imaging can be graded for keratinocyte atypia, comparable to histopathological grading.