Does Structured Reporting Improve Lung Cancer Reports? - Report - MDSpire

Does Structured Reporting Improve Lung Cancer Reports?

  • By

  • Andrea Surnit

  • July 2, 2026

  • 3 min

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Clinical Report: Does Structured Reporting Improve Lung Cancer Reports?

Overview

The implementation of a structured pathology reporting tool in lung cancer diagnostics is associated with improved report completeness and accuracy.

Background

Structured reporting in pathology is increasingly recognized for its role in improving the quality and interoperability of cancer reports. In lung cancer diagnostics, accurate and complete reporting is critical for effective patient management and treatment planning. This study evaluates the impact of a structured reporting tool on the quality of lung cancer pathology reports.

Data Highlights

PhaseCasesCompletenessMissing Elements
Retrospective12398%33
Prospective15199.9%1

Key Findings

  • Structured reporting achieved 99.9% completeness in prospective cases.
  • Only one required data element was missing in the structured reporting phase.
  • Conventional reports had 11 missing or inconsistent data elements.
  • Automated tumor-node-metastasis staging detected six classification errors in conventional reports.
  • 90% adoption rate of the structured reporting tool among pathologists during the prospective phase.
  • Feedback indicated pathologists valued automated completeness checks and dynamic data displays.

Clinical Implications

The findings suggest that structured reporting can significantly enhance the completeness and accuracy of lung cancer pathology reports. This may facilitate better clinical decision-making and improve patient outcomes.

Conclusion

Structured reporting has demonstrated substantial improvements in the quality of lung cancer pathology reports compared to traditional methods.

Related Resources & Content

  1. Martina Haberecker, Virchows Archiv, 2023 -- Does Structured Reporting Improve Lung Cancer Reports?
  2. conexiant — Can AI Clarify Lung Screening?
  3. The ASCO Post — Low-Dose CT Screening Identifies More Early Lung Cancer but Has Lower Positive Predictive Value vs Radiography
  4. European Radiology — Advantages and Disadvantages of Reporting Incidental Findings in Lung Cancer Screening Programs
  5. JAMA Network Open — County-Level Structural Racism Indices and Racial Disparities in Lung Cancer Care
  6. Can AI Clarify Lung Screening?
  7. Low-Dose CT Screening Identifies More Early Lung Cancer but Has Lower Positive Predictive Value vs Radiography
  8. Advantages and Disadvantages of Reporting Incidental Findings in Lung Cancer Screening Programs
  9. County-Level Structural Racism Indices and Racial Disparities in Lung Cancer Care
  10. Implementation of the 9th TNM for lung cancer: practical insights for radiologists
  11. Lung Cancers - ICCR
  12. Impact of template-based synoptic reporting on completeness of surgical pathology reports

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