Patient Resources — Understanding Your Diagnosis

A pathology report can be one of the most important documents you receive in your medical life — and one of the hardest to understand. Learning how to read one helps you have more informed conversations with your doctor and take a more active role in your care.

What is a Pathology Report?

A pathology report is a document written by a pathologist — a physician who specializes in diagnosing disease by examining tissue, cells, and body fluids under a microscope. When a biopsy or surgical specimen is taken from your body, it is sent to the pathology lab. The pathologist examines it and writes a report describing what they found. This report is often the definitive basis for a diagnosis of cancer or other serious conditions.

The Key Sections of a Pathology Report

Patient and Specimen Information

The top of the report includes your name, date of birth, the date the specimen was collected, the type of specimen, and where it was taken from. Always verify this information is correct — errors in specimen identification, while rare, do occur.

Clinical History

A brief summary of your relevant medical history and the reason the specimen was taken. This gives the pathologist context for their examination.

Gross Description

A description of what the specimen looks like to the naked eye — its size, color, shape, and texture. This section uses the word “gross” to mean visible without a microscope, not unpleasant.

Microscopic Description

The most technical section — describes what the pathologist sees under the microscope including the types of cells present, their appearance, and any abnormalities. This section is often dense with medical terminology.

Diagnosis

The most important section. This is the pathologist’s conclusion — the formal diagnosis based on their examination. It states what the tissue is, whether it is benign or malignant, and if cancer is present, the type and grade.

Key Terms to Know

  • Benign — not cancerous; cells are abnormal but not invasive
  • Malignant — cancerous; cells can invade nearby tissue and spread
  • In situ — cancer cells are present but have not invaded surrounding tissue
  • Invasive — cancer has grown beyond its original location into nearby tissue
  • Grade — how abnormal the cancer cells look; higher grade means faster growing and more aggressive
  • Stage — how far the cancer has spread (note: staging is usually determined separately from the pathology report)
  • Margins — the edges of the removed tissue; “clear” or “negative” margins mean no cancer cells at the edge; “positive” margins mean cancer cells were found at the edge
  • Differentiation — how much the cancer cells resemble normal cells; “well differentiated” means they look more like normal cells; “poorly differentiated” means they look very abnormal
  • Lymph nodes — if lymph nodes were removed and tested, the report will state whether cancer was found in them

Questions to Ask Your Doctor

  • What does my diagnosis mean in plain language?
  • What is the grade of my cancer and what does that mean for my prognosis?
  • Were the margins clear?
  • Were any lymph nodes involved?
  • What additional tests do I need to determine staging?
  • How does this report affect my treatment options?
  • Should I get a second pathology opinion?

Should You Get a Second Pathology Opinion?

For a serious diagnosis — especially cancer — a second pathology opinion is often worth pursuing. Pathology interpretation involves judgment, and even experienced pathologists can disagree. Major cancer centers routinely re-examine specimens referred from other institutions and sometimes reach different conclusions. You can request that your slides be sent to another pathologist or institution for review.

How to Get a Copy of Your Report

Under HIPAA you have the right to a copy of your pathology report. Ask your doctor’s office or the hospital’s medical records department. Online patient portals often make reports available directly. Reading it alongside your doctor — or asking them to walk you through it — is the most effective approach.

Key Takeaways

  • A pathology report is the definitive basis for many serious diagnoses including cancer
  • The Diagnosis section is the most important — focus there first
  • Key terms to understand: benign vs. malignant, grade, margins, and lymph node involvement
  • Always verify your personal and specimen information is correct
  • Ask your doctor to explain the report in plain language
  • For serious diagnoses, a second pathology opinion is often worth pursuing
  • You have the right to a copy of your pathology report under HIPAA

Disclaimer: The information on MedicalResearch.com is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, cure, or treat any medical or other condition. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health professional.