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<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Fig1 Guo JofPathInformatics2016 7.jpg|240px]]</div>
<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Fig2 Berezin PLoSCompBio23 19-12.png|240px]]</div>
'''"[[Journal:Digital pathology and anatomic pathology laboratory information system integration to support digital pathology sign-out|Digital pathology and anatomic pathology laboratory information system integration to support digital pathology sign-out]]"'''
'''"[[Journal:Ten simple rules for managing laboratory information|Ten simple rules for managing laboratory information]]"'''


The adoption of digital pathology offers benefits over labor-intensive, time-consuming, and error-prone manual processes. However, because most workflow and [[laboratory]] transactions are centered around the anatomical pathology laboratory information system (APLIS), adoption of digital pathology ideally requires integration with the APLIS. A digital pathology system (DPS) integrated with the APLIS was recently implemented at our institution for diagnostic use. We demonstrate how such integration supports digital workflow to sign-out anatomical pathology cases.  
[[Information]] is the cornerstone of [[research]], from experimental data/[[metadata]] and computational processes to complex inventories of reagents and equipment. These 10 simple rules discuss best practices for leveraging [[laboratory information management system]]s (LIMS) to transform this large information load into useful scientific findings. The development of [[mathematical model]]s that can predict the properties of biological systems is the holy grail of [[computational biology]]. Such models can be used to test biological hypotheses, guide the development of biomanufactured products, engineer new systems meeting user-defined specifications, and much more ... ('''[[Journal:Ten simple rules for managing laboratory information|Full article...]]''')<br />


Workflow begins when pathology cases get accessioned into the APLIS ([[Cerner Corporation|CoPathPlus]]). Glass slides from these cases are then digitized (Omnyx VL120 scanner) and automatically uploaded into the DPS (Omnyx; Integrated Digital Pathology (IDP) software v.1.3). The APLIS transmits case data to the DPS via a publishing web service. The DPS associates scanned images with the correct case using barcode labels on slides and information received from the APLIS. When pathologists remotely open a case in the DPS, additional information (e.g. gross pathology details, prior cases) gets retrieved from the APLIS through a query web service. ('''[[Journal:Digital pathology and anatomic pathology laboratory information system integration to support digital pathology sign-out|Full article...]]''')<br />
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Revision as of 18:03, 10 June 2024

Fig2 Berezin PLoSCompBio23 19-12.png

"Ten simple rules for managing laboratory information"

Information is the cornerstone of research, from experimental data/metadata and computational processes to complex inventories of reagents and equipment. These 10 simple rules discuss best practices for leveraging laboratory information management systems (LIMS) to transform this large information load into useful scientific findings. The development of mathematical models that can predict the properties of biological systems is the holy grail of computational biology. Such models can be used to test biological hypotheses, guide the development of biomanufactured products, engineer new systems meeting user-defined specifications, and much more ... (Full article...)

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