Paper
6 April 2005 Teleradiology and screening mammography: a telemammography system evaluation and comparison to clinical results
Joseph Ken Leader, Denise Chough M.D., Ronald J. Clearfield M.D., Marie A. Ganott M.D., Christiane Hakim M.D., Lara Hardesty M.D., Betty Shindel M.D., Jules H. Sumkin M.D., John M. Drescher, Glenn S. Maitz, David Gur
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Radiologists' performance reviewing and rating breast cancer screening mammography exams using a telemammography system was evaluated and compared with the actual clinical interpretations of the same interpretations. Mammography technologists from three remote imaging sites transmitted 245 exams to a central site (radiologists), which they (the technologists) believed needed additional procedures (termed "recall"). Current exam image data and non-image data (i.e., technologist's text message, technologist's graphic marks, patient's prior report, and Computer Aided Detection (CAD) results) were transmitted to the central site and displayed on three high-resolution, portrait monitors. Seven radiologists interpreted ("recall" or "no recall") the exams using the telemammography workstation in three separate multi-mode studies. The mean telemammography recall rates ranged from 72.3% to 82.5% while the actual clinical recall rates ranged from 38.4% to 42.3% across the three studies. Mean Kappa of agreement ranged from 0.102 to 0.213 and mean percent agreement ranged from 48.7% to 57.4% across the three studies. Eighty-seven percent of the disagreement interpretations occurred when the telemammography interpretation resulted in a recommendation to recall and the clinical interpretation resulted in a recommendation not to recall. The poor agreement between the telemammography and clinical interpretations may indicate a critical dependence on images from prior screening exams rather than any text based information. The technologists were sensitive, if not specific, to the mammography features and changes that may lead to recall. Using the telemammography system the radiologists were able to reduce the recommended recalls by the technologist by approximately 25 percent.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Joseph Ken Leader, Denise Chough M.D., Ronald J. Clearfield M.D., Marie A. Ganott M.D., Christiane Hakim M.D., Lara Hardesty M.D., Betty Shindel M.D., Jules H. Sumkin M.D., John M. Drescher, Glenn S. Maitz, and David Gur "Teleradiology and screening mammography: a telemammography system evaluation and comparison to clinical results", Proc. SPIE 5749, Medical Imaging 2005: Image Perception, Observer Performance, and Technology Assessment, (6 April 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.592823
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KEYWORDS
Mammography

Computer aided diagnosis and therapy

Visualization

Image compression

Breast

Breast cancer

Imaging systems

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