Includes article by Rhodes Scholar U.Tor Dalla Lana School of Public Health (Health Policy ) Prof.Adalsteinn D. BROWN MA MPH(Harvard) DPhil (Oxon.) pp 47-50 "The Challenge of Quantity Improvement at the System Level. Whither CCO? (Cancer Care Ontario)
Prof.Brown discusses the Cancer System Quality Index (CSQI) and the use of "SYNOPTIC PATHOLOGY". (Etymology:: taking a General or Comprehensive view)
Definition of Synoptic Reporting (COLLEGE of AMERICAN PATHOLOGISTS)
The CAP has developed this list of specific features that define synoptic reporting formatting:
1. All required cancer data from an applicable cancer protocol must be included in the report and must be displayed using a format consisting of the required checklist item (required data element), followed by its answer (response), e. g. “Tumor size: 5.5 cm”. Outline format without the paired required data element (RDE): response format is not considered synoptic.
2. Each diagnostic parameter pair (checklist RDE: response) is listed on a separate line or in a tabular format, to achieve visual separation.
Note: the following are allowed to be combined on the same line:
a. Anatomic site or specimen, laterality and procedure
b. Pathologic Staging Tumor Node Metastasis (pTNM) staging elements
c. Negative margins, as long as all negative margins are specifically enumerated
For example:
o Headers may be used to separate or group data elements
o Any line may be indented to visually group related data elements or indicate a subordinate relationship
o Text attributes (e.g., color, bold, font, size, capitalization/case, or animations) are optional
o Blank lines may be used to separate data elements and group related elements
3. If multiple responses are permitted for the same data element, the responses may be listed on a single line.
4. The synopsis can appear in the diagnosis section of the pathology report, at the end of the report or in a separate section, but all RDE and responses must be listed together in one location.
5. Additional items (not required for the CAP checklist) may be included in the synopsis but all required RDE must be present.
6. Narrative style comments are permitted in addition to, but are not as a substitute for the synoptic reporting. It is not uncommon for narrative style comments to be used for clinical history, gross descriptions and microscopic descriptions.
Additional Specifications and Options
• Data elements may be presented in any order in the report.
• Two data element names may not be listed on the same line, with the following exceptions:
o Anatomic site or specimen, laterality, and procedure
o Negative margins. Example: for colorectal carcinoma resection specimens, negative proximal, distal, and radial margins may be listed on one line
o Pathologic staging: pT, pN, and pM categories may be listed on one line. It is not necessary to include definitions of the pT, pN, and pM categories in the report.
Otherwise, only multiple values pertaining to the same data element may be listed on the same line.
• Diagnostic headlines may be included that contain some data elements in non-standard format (e.g., "INVASIVE CARCINOMA OF THE RIGHT BREAST.") However, if information in the headline includes a required element and the headline does not use the single line or multi-line format, the required information in the headline must also appear in the single line or multi-line format in the same report. December 13, 2011 - v2.0
 • Narrative comments may reference required or optional data elements. However, data
elements and values that appear in narrative comment may not be properly abstracted
and auditors are not to consider the data element and its value as having been included in a report, unless the information also appears in a properly formatted single line or multi-line statement.
• Data that are not listed as required or optional in an applicable cancer protocol may be included in any format. Examples include patient identification data (name, date of birth) or administrative data (report date, accession number)
• Required and optional data elements listed in the applicable cancer protocol may be combined into one report or broken up into separate reports. For example, separate paper reports or computer screens might be used to report histological and molecular findings, or to report gross and microscopic findings, or to report examinations of different specimens.
The CAP has developed a few examples of synoptic reporting (attached) for the use of the COC as training tools for COC inspectors. Sample reports 1-6 are examples of acceptable synoptic reporting; Sample reports 7 and 8 do not show acceptable synoptic style reporting. CAP recommends that CoC surveyors focus their evaluation of synoptic reporting only on definitive resection specimens and not biopsies at this time.
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With synoptic 
                  reports, 
                  big picture in a small package 
      July 2003 Eric 
              Skjei  
      Labs nationwide 
              are working to ensure that their pathology reporting systems conform 
              to the CAP cancer protocols, which accredited hospital cancer programs 
              must begin using by Jan. 1, 2004. 
      Fearful that 
              traditional free-text reports might not do the trick, many labs 
              have implemented backup systems ranging from templates in Word or 
              Word Perfect to simple paper checklists and notebook-based reference 
              systems to try to ensure that the reports meet the new requirements 
              of the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer. 
      A hospital-based 
              laboratory system in Sioux Falls, SD, is pioneering the use of a 
              digital synoptic reporting system for CoPathPlus, from Cerner Corp. 
              The system functions as a database devoted to pathology reporting 
              functions—in this case, cancer protocols. Cerner also provides 
              a synoptic reporting solution for its Millennium PathNet platform. 
      The synoptic 
              reporting that Keith Anderson, MD, is doing in Sioux Falls is a 
              “concise standardized reporting that includes all data needed 
              for accurate staging, treatment, and prognosis,” he says.  
              
      “‘Synoptic’ 
              implies that you’re condensing things, making it more tight, 
              if you will,” says Dr. Anderson, chief of pathology, Sioux 
              Valley Hospital, University of South Dakota Medical Center. “My 
              bias is that we’re not making it less, but we’re standardizing 
              it and making sure we get everything in there that we want to get 
              in there.” 
      In pathology 
              reporting, “synoptic” traditionally has referred to 
              checklists of various types intended to ensure that essential elements 
              are not omitted from reports. In Cerner’s synoptic reporting 
              product, as implemented by LCM Pathologists, P.C., at Sioux Valley 
              Hospital, synoptic translates into preformatted templates or worksheets, 
              developed by Dr. Anderson and  
              his colleagues, in which specific fields are assigned to given elements 
              in the protocol. 
      The key to using 
              worksheets is to be able to retrieve answers to questions quickly 
              and accurately. Having to read free-text reports to do so is time 
              consuming and error prone. Sioux Valley has found that using the 
              synoptic reporting coding product allows it to reduce as many as 
              45 pages of cancer protocol to two to three pages of worksheet on 
              the computer screen. 
      The Sioux Valley 
              worksheets are not only comprehensive and efficient, they are standardized, 
              which may make it easier to share data across reports  
              in the future. “Our bias is that we want to try to capture 
              that data for future clinical research as well,” says Dr. 
              Anderson. “That would be an ultimate goal.” 
      Better 
              than free text  
              A product with database-like capabilities offers distinct advantages 
              over traditional free-text reporting systems. Consider the simple 
              task of searching for tumors of a specific size. “If you wanted 
              to look for all the cases that had a particular tumor size, for 
              example, you could select the appropriate tumor type, search for 
              all those of a certain size, or even sort by size in ascending or 
              descending rank order,” says Tom Schnabel, LCM Pathologists’ 
              business manager. 
      To do something 
              even remotely comparable in a free-text report would require manually 
              inspecting each report and would be prohibitively time consuming. 
              “The problems with free-text searching are many and varied,” 
              Schnabel says. If you specify “tumor size” as your search 
              term, for example, you might, depending on your search function, 
              get every report that contains the word “tumor” and 
              every report that contains the word “size”—in 
              other words, a lot of material you don’t want. Or if you search 
              for a specific numerical value, Schnabel says, you might, depending 
              on your search capabilities, receive everything that has that number 
              associated with it, whether it’s related to tumor size or 
              not. Or your search might find the word or phrase in the text accurately 
              and repeatedly but fail to keep track of the number of instances 
              found.  
      “But in 
              the CoPath product,” he says, “‘tumor size’ 
              is in the synoptic value dictionary under the value of ‘tumor 
              size,’ and it will search for just those cases that have that 
              value point populated and for just the value or range of values 
              you specify.” 
      LCM went live 
              with the new synoptic coding product in January, and Dr. Anderson 
              estimates that the group has been adding about two worksheets per 
              month ever since. “I think it’s working pretty well,” 
              he says. “There are plenty of bumps in the road because biologic 
              systems are highly variable, and we keep coming across oddball cases 
              that don’t fit quite the way we had envisioned them fitting 
              in this digitized report format.” 
      Dr. Anderson 
              says the reports themselves do not have a digitized or preformatted 
              appearance; they look very much like their free-text brethren. “We’ve 
              tried to make it look like close to what we were dictating as reports 
              before, but we’re able to standardize more from my report 
              to my partner’s report,” he says. Every worksheet also 
              supports a fair amount of additional free-texting capability to 
              capture information that doesn’t lend itself to preformatted 
              coding solutions. 
      Top 
              five cancer types  
              Only a small percentage of the reports Dr. Anderson’s 
              group issues are produced using the synoptic reporting system since 
              it is targeted only at cancer reporting. But within the cancer report 
              function, a high percentage of the most common cancers seen by the 
              group are being reported using the product. “If you were to 
              say, look at all the breast cancers, for example, the product is 
              basically handling all of them,” Dr. Anderson says. 
      “We’re 
              proceeding by tumor type,” Schnabel adds. “We did breast 
              tumors first; then we did colon resections, lymph nodes, and then 
              endometrium, uterine tumors.” The group’s understanding 
              is that the Commission on Cancer inspection focuses on the top five 
              most common cancers seen in a hospital program. “So we’re 
              trying to get our worksheets out for our most common tumors and 
              not worry too much about the 40th most common type,” Dr. Anderson 
              says. 
      The product 
              can be designed to prompt the user if a required field is  
              not completed. It can even predesignate a set of specific choices, 
              allow the user to select from that list, and require the user to 
              make only one selection. 
      It also supports 
              additional explanatory material. “We can build in educational 
              notes,” says Dr. Anderson. “If somebody is not sure 
              what a term means and it’s something we don’t address 
              very often, we might note, for example, that this diagnosis requires 
              X percent of something, specifying what that percentage is so the 
              user is reminded as they move through  
              the worksheet.” 
      Support from 
              Cerner has been excellent, according to Dr. Anderson and Schnabel. 
              “Part of that is because we were the first site to start using 
              this on a live basis, and they really dedicated resources to us 
              to get it developed and up and running,” says Dr. Anderson. 
      The synoptic 
              product is available on the Millennium PathNet version 2003.02 or 
              the CoPathPlus version 2.3 or higher. “We were the fourth 
              site in the country to go live on version 2.3,” Schnabel notes. 
              “But as they roll out 2.3, there will be more people that 
              have this available to them.” 
      Consistency 
              and productivity 
              Clinicians, of course, benefit from consistency across pathology 
              reports. “Even if we’re not worried about having all 
              the appropriate staging information and treatment information in 
              the report, it can be very confusing for clinicians to read my report 
              and then see that of a partner who has a totally different approach 
              to the way they put their report together,” Dr. Anderson says. 
              “Clinicians can find it difficult to pull out the correct 
              information.” That any pathology report produced by the system 
              can offer the same information in the same order is an important, 
              if intangible, benefit.  
      Clinicians offer 
              positive feedback about the reports when asked, but perhaps more 
              important is that the implementation has been relatively seamless 
              and has not provoked a lot of negative comments or queries. “As 
              the business manager,” Schnabel says, “I think that 
              not getting any negative comments is in itself proof that we’re 
              meeting their needs—or we would certainly be hearing about 
              it.” 
      Although productivity 
              has not been targeted as a primary benefit, there is little doubt 
              that the CoPath product is making it easier to comply with the protocols 
              than would paper-based methods.  
      “In terms 
              of how fast we can do this versus how fast we can dictate it, I 
              don’t think we’re going to see a whole lot of difference,” 
              Dr. Anderson says. “But I do strongly believe what we’re 
              doing is faster than what we could do if I were pulling out the 
              workbook, finding page 15 that has colon cancer on  
              it, and stepping through that page to make sure I had done all of 
              those things right.”  
      While dictating 
              from memory is faster than working through the worksheet on the 
              computer, knowing that it’s critical to get in all those staging 
              points and not miss any is the higher priority, analogous to the 
              checklist an airline pilot uses, says Dr. Anderson. A pilot might 
              be able to get in the air quicker if he or she doesn’t have 
              to step through the checklist, but neither the pilot nor anyone 
              flying with the pilot is going to feel as comfortable. 
            
Dr. Anderson’s group of 16 pathologists runs the gamut with regard to 
  comfort in using computer tools. “If you have someone who is very computer 
  savvy, they can be up and running in a matter of minutes,” he says. “If 
  you have somebody who is totally computer phobic, they’re going to be 
  dictating it off a piece of paper and the secretarial staff is going to be putting 
  it in. We’ve got all ends of the spectrum here.” |  
 
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