{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Visual Assessment of 2-Dimensional Levels Within 3-Dimensional Pathology Data Sets of Prostate Needle Biopsies Reveals Substantial Spatial Heterogeneity. {Author}: Koyuncu C;Janowczyk A;Farre X;Pathak T;Mirtti T;Fernandez PL;Pons L;Reder NP;Serafin R;Chow SSL;Viswanathan VS;Glaser AK;True LD;Liu JTC;Madabhushi A; {Journal}: Lab Invest {Volume}: 103 {Issue}: 12 {Year}: 2023 12 18 {Factor}: 5.502 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.labinv.2023.100265 {Abstract}: Prostate cancer prognostication largely relies on visual assessment of a few thinly sectioned biopsy specimens under a microscope to assign a Gleason grade group (GG). Unfortunately, the assigned GG is not always associated with a patient's outcome in part because of the limited sampling of spatially heterogeneous tumors achieved by 2-dimensional histopathology. In this study, open-top light-sheet microscopy was used to obtain 3-dimensional pathology data sets that were assessed by 4 human readers. Intrabiopsy variability was assessed by asking readers to perform Gleason grading of 5 different levels per biopsy for a total of 20 core needle biopsies (ie, 100 total images). Intrabiopsy variability (Cohen κ) was calculated as the worst pairwise agreement in GG between individual levels within each biopsy and found to be 0.34, 0.34, 0.38, and 0.43 for the 4 pathologists. These preliminary results reveal that even within a 1-mm-diameter needle core, GG based on 2-dimensional images can vary dramatically depending on the location within a biopsy being analyzed. We believe that morphologic assessment of whole biopsies in 3 dimension has the potential to enable more reliable and consistent tumor grading.