Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - (Page 22) special section cad’s impact on radiology By Beth Walsh Breast MR CAD David Gruen, MD, of Norwalk Radiology & Mammography Center in Norwalk, Conn., uses CADstream from Confirma for breast MRI on up to 10 patients a day. “Once we find an abnormality, we’ve got to make a decision on whether it’s something to ignore or worry about.” Two factors help with that determination: the lesion’s kinetics and its morphology. “Before CAD, for breast MR there were proponents of the morphology school of thought,” Gruen says. They believed that only the shape of lesions mattered. Particularly in Europe, the school of thought was more geared to kinetics, such as a lesion’s vascularity, how fast it takes up contrast, and whether contrast washes out. Experts realized both were important and the challenge became how to visualize and evaluate both appropriately. Clinicians used to look at kinetics by finding each image on the sequence— which could take up to a half-hour per lesion. “CADstream automated that process,” Gruen says. As breast MR has gotten better, with improved spatial and temporal resolution, physicians can find lesions just 2 or 3 millimeters in size. “CAD programs let you quickly evaluate a huge set of data, up to 3,000 images. You can’t be doing highquality MRI without a CAD package.” The rate of false-positive biopsies has gone down dramatically over the past couple of years, Gruen says. And, he is finding smaller cancers more readily, particularly ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). CADstream lets him detect DCIS without manually performing asymmetric enhancement. Another important gain is that Gruen can’t remember the last time a patient was detected with stage 3 or 4 cancer. While that is partly attributable to a good screening rate and breast cancer awareness, “patients are showing up in our practice 22 Health Imaging & IT | July 2008 Earlier Detection, Increased Efficiency Advances in breast MR technology and its increased usage thanks to its recommended use in some specific patient populations combined with computer-aided detection (CAD) are helping radiologists efficiently review breast images. with small cancers that are easily treatable. As the technology gets better, we will continue to find smaller cancers.” Robin Shermis, MD, is one of three radiologists at Northwest Ohio Dedicated Breast MRI Center in Toledo using AuroraCAD from Aurora Imaging Technology. The software is “extremely powerful, very efficient and provides for standardized interpretation,” he says. “It’s been nothing less than tremendous.” The easy-to-learn software makes it hard to miss even subtle cancers, Shermis says. That, plus educating the referring physicians, has helped the facility increase its referral patterns. “As soon as you’re done scanning, the images in CAD are almost immediately available,” he says. “We’re able to go over the case with the patient, do a second look and even biopsy at that time, if necessary.” Terri-Ann Gizienski, MD, breast imaging director at a community imaging center that’s part of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) in Pennsylvania, has been using DynaCAD from Invivo Corp. for almost four years. She particularly appreciates the software’s biopsy and intervention feature, which helps her better define which lesions require biopsy. It also makes biopsies easier to perform. “It will quickly let you know if the coordinates are not acceptable and you cannot approach the lesion from that angle.” The software has helped her become more efficient with her reading, spending less time manipulating images. Plus, she can import and export images to and from other facilities. “I can communicate results more quickly and referring doctors can see what I’m talking about.” She also can show patients exactly what she is going to biopsy. For patients being treated for breast cancer, she can show them exactly where the cancer begins and ends. “CAD makes it easy to compare before and after images and show them that their tumor is shrinking.” Gizienski performs about 10 breast MR studies each week, a figure that has been increasing. “Women are becoming more aware of the capability of breast MRI and referring physicians and surgeons see the utility in it.” HealthImaging.com http://HealthImaging.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 On the Web The Enterprise News Update Convention Spotlight: AHRA 2008 Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver Mammography CAD Comes of Age Breast MR CAD: Earlier Detection, Increased Efficiency Lung CAD Earning a Spot in Day-to-Day Practice Colon CAD: Breaking Down Barriers Modality Review: Cardiac CT Angiography: A Clear Pathway to Better Cardiac Patient Management Practice Management: RIS Rights Efficiency & Productivity Wrongs In Practice: Advanced Visualization Across the Enterprise Regulatory Update: Beware: Recovery Audit Contractors Poised for Permanent Status Technology Outlook: Compressing Images for Remote Transmission Reader's Resource Stat Sheet Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 (Page Cover1) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 (Page Cover2) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 (Page 1) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 (Page 2) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 (Page 3) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - On the Web (Page 4) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - On the Web (Page 5) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - On the Web (Page 6) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - The Enterprise (Page 7) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - News Update (Page 8) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - News Update (Page 9) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - News Update (Page 10) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - News Update (Page 11) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Convention Spotlight: AHRA 2008 (Page 12) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Convention Spotlight: AHRA 2008 (Page 13) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 14) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 15) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 16) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 17) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 18) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Cover Story: Driving Metrics to Drive Business: Digital Dashboards Deliver (Page 19) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Mammography CAD Comes of Age (Page 20) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Mammography CAD Comes of Age (Page 21) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Breast MR CAD: Earlier Detection, Increased Efficiency (Page 22) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Breast MR CAD: Earlier Detection, Increased Efficiency (Page 23) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Lung CAD Earning a Spot in Day-to-Day Practice (Page 24) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Lung CAD Earning a Spot in Day-to-Day Practice (Page 25) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Colon CAD: Breaking Down Barriers (Page 26) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Colon CAD: Breaking Down Barriers (Page 27) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Modality Review: Cardiac CT Angiography: A Clear Pathway to Better Cardiac Patient Management (Page 28) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Modality Review: Cardiac CT Angiography: A Clear Pathway to Better Cardiac Patient Management (Page 29) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Modality Review: Cardiac CT Angiography: A Clear Pathway to Better Cardiac Patient Management (Page 30) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Modality Review: Cardiac CT Angiography: A Clear Pathway to Better Cardiac Patient Management (Page 31) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Practice Management: RIS Rights Efficiency & Productivity Wrongs (Page 32) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Practice Management: RIS Rights Efficiency & Productivity Wrongs (Page 33) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - In Practice: Advanced Visualization Across the Enterprise (Page 34) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - In Practice: Advanced Visualization Across the Enterprise (Page 35) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Regulatory Update: Beware: Recovery Audit Contractors Poised for Permanent Status (Page 36) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Regulatory Update: Beware: Recovery Audit Contractors Poised for Permanent Status (Page 37) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Technology Outlook: Compressing Images for Remote Transmission (Page 38) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Reader's Resource (Page 39) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Stat Sheet (Page 40) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Stat Sheet (Page Cover3) Healthcare Imaging & IT - July 2008 - Stat Sheet (Page Cover4)
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