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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2015
The Ki-67 proliferative index has become a useful, objective, immunohistochemical tool that can aid in grading and prognostication for patients with oligodendrogliomas. Previous studies have described the prognostic significance of the Ki-67 index for such patients.
According to the WHO classification of tumors of the central nervous system (2007) ”mitotic activity is low in WHO grade II oligodendroglioma, and labeling indices for proliferation markers are accordingly low, usually below 5%”. Furthermore, the predictive value of the Ki-67 index appears to be independent of age, tumor site, and histological grade. What is less well described is the relative accuracy of traditional vs. semi-automated methods of enumeration for a test where small differences can influence grading, prognosis and treatment. Tang et al. (2012), studying gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumours, found high concordance between two semi-automated methods for Ki-67 quantitation whereas “eyeballed estimates” were far less reliable. We will compare the reported proliferative index estimates to those calculated by digital image analysis of 35 recent oligodendrogliomas from the LHSC Pathology archives.