Abstract
ObjectiveTo study the effects of exposure to a prior diagnosis (PD) on second opinions in breast pathology.Materials and MethodsPathologists interpreted digital breast biopsy cases in 2 phases separated by a washout. Phase 2 interpretations were randomly assigned to PD or no PD. When presented, PD was always more or less severe than a participant's phase 1 diagnosis. Viewing behaviors, including zoom level, were recorded during all interpretations. Twenty pathologists yielded 556 interpretations of 32 different cases.ResultsPathologists were 71% more likely to give a less severe diagnosis when exposed to a less severe PD than with no PD (RR 1.71, 95% CI 1.33-2.20, P < 0.001). In comparison, when exposed to a more severe PD than with no PD, pathologists were 27% more likely to give a more severe diagnosis, but the effect was not significant (RR 1.27, 95% CI 0.87-1.86, P = 0.223). Compared with no PD, viewing behavior shifted toward more focus on critical image regions with exposure to a less severe PD and toward higher zoom levels with exposure to a more severe PD.DiscussionResults indicate anchoring and confirmation biases from PD exposure, such that second opinions after PD exposure are not independent assessments. Viewing behaviors illustrated how PD alters the interpretive process, including increased zooming when exposed to a more severe PD. Results have implications for best practices for computer-aided diagnosis tools.ImplicationsWhen giving a second opinion, exposure to a PD can sway diagnostic classifications and alter interpretive behavior, highlighting a need for protocols that encourage independent assessments.HighlightsIn pathology diagnosis, second opinions are systematically influenced by prior diagnostic information.Less severe prior diagnoses shift pathologists' visual attention toward clinically critical regions of a pathology image, whereas more severe prior diagnoses tend to elicit increased magnification during case interpretation.Specific viewing behaviors partially mediate the effect of prior diagnoses on second opinion diagnoses.When prior diagnoses are disclosed to pathologists, anchoring and confirmation biases undermine the independence of second opinion decisions.