A b s t r a c t
The interobserver variability of a Papanicolaou smear diagnosis of atypical glandular cells of undetermined significance (AGUS) has not been measured. Four expert cytopathologists restrospectively reclassified 100 smears originally diagnosed as AGUSAlthough the Papanicolaou smear is one of the most effective screening tools in medicine, errors still occur. One source or error that has received a great deal of attention is diagnostic error, which is a leading cause of medical litigation.1-17 There has been considerably less study of interobserver diagnostic variability, including the relationship of variability to error and its impact on patient care.
4,18-31For Papanicolaou smear interpretation, most cytopathologists use the Bethesda System, which is composed of semiquantitative categories. 32 Interobserver diagnostic variability has been measured for only some of these categories. The diagnosis of atypical glandular cells of undetermined significance (AGUS) has been poorly characterized and has not been evaluated in terms of interobserver diagnostic variability. Follow-up studies show that a clinically significant lesion, ranging from squamous dysplasia to adenocarcinoma, is present in up to 83% of women with a diagnosis of AGUS. 33 " 41 Only 12% to 46% of these lesions are true glandular neoplasias, and up to 68% are high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSILs). 33^11 Thus, AGUS is a high-risk diagnosis. Assuming equal disease prevalence, if a laboratory has a low rate of making a diagnosis of AGUS, lesions that would be called AGUS by a second laboratory are either being classified in another clinically significant category or being missed. Such potential diagnostic discrepancies raise the possibility that some errors are simply manifestations of interobserver diagnostic variability.In this study, expert cytopathologists, including 3 cytopathology laboratory directors, retrospectively and independently reviewed 100 cases that originally were diagnosed as AGUS. Interobserver agreement, diagnostic accuracy, and