- When dealing with cancer, classification is the key to diagnosis – and the WHO Blue Books are the definitive resource for tumor classification
- As evidence evolves, so must the books, which are changing to meet international standards, and to include new technologies and approaches
- As an international collaboration, the books must strike a balance between the needs of high- and low-income settings
- The content of the books is constantly changing as we learn more about cancer, so scientific debate is encouraged to produce the best possible documents
Few diseases receive more attention or are more thoroughly studied than cancer. We, as pathologists, are uniquely placed to understand cancer and, as a result, to develop logical, evidence-based classifications for the disease. The classification of cancer is not only an important academic exercise in its own right, but it also underpins the diagnosis and treatment of individual patients, as well as informing research into new therapies and prevention strategies. The World Health Organization (WHO)’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) is responsible for the Classification of Tumors – a series of reference books known colloquially as the “Blue Books,” which collate key information on cancer for those who study, diagnose, monitor, or treat the disease.
The Blue Books provide both an internationally recognized classification and the standards against which cancers and benign tumors are diagnosed. These standards include not only diagnostic criteria, but also images that pathologists can compare with individual patient tumors to arrive at a diagnosis. Such information underpins all cancer diagnosis, treatment and research; without the correct diagnosis, appropriate patient management is impossible, and without the ability to refer to correctly diagnosed tumors, cancer research is also impossible – whether it be comparison of cancers of one diagnostic group with controls, drug trials, or epidemiological investigations. In the past, the books were developed by histopathologists with expertise in the features of the disease – but now, as genetics and other disciplines become increasingly important to the classification and diagnosis of cancer, things are changing. As radiology advances and methods such as liquid biopsy become more sophisticated, it is quite likely that many patients will no longer need a solid tissue biopsy. This is a challenge for cancer registries in particular, as they require diagnostic information drawn largely from pathology reports. It is also a challenge for the books as we seek to incorporate more information and yet keep them concise. The key concept remains the classification of cancers on the basis of shared characteristics, but because those are no longer limited to histology, we need to involve other disciplines in putting together the official classification. The WHO Blue Books are well-known to pathologists, but one of the things I’m keen to do is bring the books to a wider audience, including those in cancer registration and epidemiology, those in basic or applied research, and those in clinical roles who need to better understand cancer diagnosis. I very much hope that they will use the Blue Books too, of course!