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In Colombia, cancer is recognized as a high-cost pathology by the national government and the Colombian High-Cost Disease Fund. As of 2020, the situation is most critical for adult cancer patients, particularly those under public healthcare and residing in remote regions of the country. The highest lag time for a diagnosis was observed for cervical cancer (79.13â¯days), followed by prostate (77.30â¯days), and breast cancer (70.25â¯days). Timely and accurate histopathological reporting plays a vital role in the diagnosis of cancer. In recent years, digital pathology has been globally implemented as a technological tool in two main areas: telepathology (TP) and computational pathology. TP has been shown to improve rapid and timely diagnosis in anatomic pathology by facilitating interaction between general laboratories and specialized pathologists worldwide through information and telecommunication technologies. Computational pathology provides diagnostic and prognostic assistance based on histopathological patterns, molecular, and clinical information, aiding pathologists in making more accurate diagnoses. We present the study protocol of the GLORIA digital pathology network, a pioneering initiative, and national grant-approved program aiming to design and pilot a Colombian digital pathology transformation focused on TP and computational pathology, in response to the general needs of pathology laboratories for diagnosing complex malignant tumors. The study protocol describes the design of a TP network to expand oncopathology services across all Colombian regions. It also describes an artificial intelligence proposal for lung cancer, one of Colombia's most prevalent cancers, and a freely accessible national histopathological image database to facilitate image analysis studies.
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INTRODUCTION: There is an emerging need for telecytology in Colombia as the demand for cytopathology has increased. However, due to economic and technological constraints telecytology services are limited. Our aim was to evaluate the diagnostic feasibility of using whole slide imaging with and without Z-stacking for telecytology in Colombia, South America. METHODS: Archival glass slides from 17 fine needle aspiration smears were digitized employing whole slide imaging (WSI) (Nanozoomer 2.0 HT, Hamamatsu) in one Z-plane at 40x, and panoramic digital imaging (Panoptiq system, ViewsIQ) combining low-magnification digital maps with embedded 40x Z-stacks of representative regions of interest. Fourteen Colombian pathologists reviewed both sets of digital images. Diagnostic concordance, time to diagnosis, image quality (scale 1-10), usefulness of Z-stacking, and technical difficulties were recorded. RESULTS: Image quality scored by pathologists was on average 8.3 for WSI and 8.7 for panoramic images with Z-stacks (P = .03). However, diagnostic concordance was not impacted by image quality ranking. In the majority of cases (72.4%) pathologists deemed Z-stacking to be diagnostically helpful. Technical issues related to Z-stack video performance constituted only a minor proportion of technical problems reported. Slow downloads and crashing of files while viewing were mostly experienced with larger WSI files. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that international telecytology for diagnostic purposes is feasible. Panoramic images had to be acquired manually, but were of suitable diagnostic quality and generated smaller image files associated with fewer technical errors. Z-stacking proved to be useful in the majority of cases and is thus recommended for telecytology.
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Consulta Remota/métodos , Telepatología/métodos , Colombia , Citodiagnóstico/métodos , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Patología Clínica/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estados UnidosRESUMEN
Gastrointestinal bleeding in HIV patients secondary to coinfection by HHV8 and development of Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) is a rare complication even if no skin lesions are detected on physical examination. This article indicates which patients might develop this type of clinical sign and also tries to recall that absence of skin lesions never rules out the presence of KS, especially if gastrointestinal involvement is documented. Gastrointestinal bleeding in terms of hematemesis has rarely been reported in the literature. We review some important clinical findings, diagnosis, and treatment approach. We present the case of an HIV patient who presented to the emergency department with hematemesis and gastrointestinal signs of KS on upper gastrointestinal endoscopy without any dermatological involvement.