Principles of gross pathology
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This article discusses principles of gross pathology, also principles of grossing. It serves as an introduction to the topic of gross pathology and covers what is generally the minimum for a specimen.
Parameters
All specimens
- How it was received, e.g. 10% formalin, fresh.
- Label, e.g. "ECC".
- Dimension - at the very least one.
- Number of pieces - counted if less or equal to six, estimated if more.
- Appearance, e.g. fibrofatty tissue, tan tissue.
Other parameters
- Mass (weight).
- Inking.
- Tumour:
- Size.
- Distance to margins.
- Border, e.g. infiltrative, well-circumscribed.
- Colour.
- Firmness.
- Necrosis.
- Hemorrhage.
- Cystic component.
Multiple lesions
In the context of several (large) lesions it is good practice to:
- Measure the distance between the lesions.‡
- Take sections showing the interface between the lesions (if possible) or non-lesional tissue between the lesions.‡
- Document with images (photographs).
Note:
- ‡ If the tissue is studded with too many lesions to count this is impractical. Practically, four or five lesions is a reasonable limit; if more lesions are present the focus should be on (1) the largest lesions, (2) the distance to the margins for the largest lesions and the closest (smaller) lesion(s).
Report organization
- A gross report that follows the order in which things are done may reduce omissions.
- The cut-up generally is: (1) identification - patient/specimen type, (2) orientation & measurement, (3) external description/assessment, (4) painting, (5) opening, (6) internal description/assessment, (7) internal measurements, (8) blocking.
- Generally, gross report elements are found in the order they are done at the grossing bench, e.g. identification patient/specimen type is first, blocks are last.
Blocking principles
It makes sense to consistently submit blocks in a certain order. This avoids mix-ups that can lead to problems, and may avoid that important things are forgotten.
A set of blocking conventions
Block ordering
- Surgical margins are submitted first.
- The rationale for this is: one is less likely to have tumour pickup if they are cut first.
- Representative benign parenchyma is submitted last.
Note:
- It should be clear to people not in the gross room whether it was an en face margin or an on edge margin.
Laterality and orientation
- Left before right.
- Anterior before posterior.
- Clockwise and starting at 12 o'clock.
The preceding conventions are arbitrary. The first pair can be remembered by... the first in the alphabet is first.
Measurement principles
- It is preferable to make distance measurements to one reference point - this avoids calculations.
- If the finding is a small tumour/mass (e.g. colonic polyp) it should be measured to the nearest margin if only one measure is given.
Identification of case and person (dictation)
Identify yourself:
- Name.
- Initials.
- Date of dictation.
Specimen
- Number of parts: [Single part specimen / multiple part specimen: A to ___].
Identifiers:
- Last name (spell out).
- First name (spell out)
- Surgical number.
- Specimen received: [fresh / in formalin].
- Specimen identified as: [left kidney / ...].
See also
- Gross pathology.
- Specimen opening - also known as freshing.
- Marking ink.