Eh. Van Der Meij et al., Interobserver and intraobserver variability in the histologic assessment of oral lichen planus, J ORAL PATH, 28(6), 1999, pp. 274-277
The purpose of this study was to evaluate interobserver and intraobserver v
ariability in the histopathological assessment of oral lichen planus (OLP)
since this may influence the outcome of studies on epidemiology, treatment
and prognosis. Five oral pathologists examined 60 microscopic slides, not b
eing informed about the original histopathological assessment. Forty-five o
f the cases had been originally signed out as OLP; the remaining 15 cases r
epresented a mixture of other oral white lesions. No clinical information o
r patient data were provided with the cases. Each reviewing pathologist was
asked to apply the WHO definition of OLP and to categorize each case as ei
ther: 1) evident OLP, 2) compatible with OLP, or 3) no histological support
for OLP. After 2 months, each of the five reviewing pathologists were give
n 45 slides that were randomly retrieved from the original 60. Interobserve
r and intraobserver variability were assessed by calculation of unweighted
kappa statistics. Interobserver agreement varied from 0.20 (poor) to 0.51 (
moderate), while the intraobserver agreement varied from 0.50 (moderate) to
0.67 (substantial). Histopathological assessment of OLP, based on the avai
lable WHO definition? is a rather subjective and insufficiently reproducibl
e process. Stricter diagnostic criteria are required in order to obtain a m
ore reproducible diagnosis of OLP.