For pathologists the computer could soon become the diagnostic workstation, customized by the scientist to provide the resources to improve diagnostic outcomes, advise on treatments and monitor patient responses.
Pathology services play an important role in the study of disease, principally:
- Pathologists diagnose our illnesses;
- Pathologists screen us for congenital diseases, cancer and other conditions; and,
- Pathologists monitor the progress of disease and manage our therapies.
The vast majority of pathology laboratories still undertake manual procedures to reach a medical conclusion: these are tissue-based examinations performed using the traditional process of analyzing glass slide samples using a microscope.
However, it is possible for much of this process to be automated. One such example is the IntelliSite ultra fast scanner. This is a high-throughput bright-field slide scanner that accommodates current histopathology requirements together with room for expansion. The device also speeds up the time-to-result by allowing preparations to be run overnight. The scanner has a storage capacity of 300 barcoded slides.
Other examples of the digital transformation of pathology underway include:
The scanning of histology slides;
The use of analytical software (instead of personnel) to correlate patient data and images;
The electronic delivery of patient information;
Sharing of digital information between hospitals, including having another pathologist provide a second opinion rapidly (so-called “telepathology”);
Having secure data transmission to avoid security breached;
Setting up files of images from past cases so that diagnoses can be cross-compared;
Establishing databases to assist with making medical decisions more quickly.
The digital transformation of pathology has several advantages. According to VisioPharm, digital technology has the potential:
- to reduce subjectivity
- improve diagnostic confidence
- lead to more diagnoses being reproducible (an important step in reducing the risk of misdiagnosis)
There are also signs that the rate of digital transformation is increasing. Growth in digital pathology imaging solutions is starting to transform how laboratories manage and interpret glass slides, taking the analysis and interpretation of histological images to the computer screen.
