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Improving Imaging Outcomes for Pediatric Patients

Mohammed, Sharon; Molvin, Lior; Bittman, Mark
PMID: 35508403
ISSN: 1943-5657
CID: 5216252

The Use of Sunitinib as Maintenance Therapy in a Pediatric Patient With a Poorly Differentiated Thymic Carcinoma

Romanos-Sirakis, Eleny; Doan, Andrew; Bittman, Mark E; Webb, Ryan L; Williamson, Alex K; Edelman, Morris; Hanson, Derek; Riely, Gregory J; Fein Levy, Carolyn
BACKGROUND:Thymic carcinomas are rare aggressive mediastinal tumors with a median survival of 2 years. OBSERVATION/METHODS:We present a pediatric patient who was diagnosed with metastatic thymic carcinoma and showed continuous improvement of his primary mass and lung metastases with a regimen of cisplatin/docetaxel followed by long-term maintenance therapy with sunitinib for over 5 years. CONCLUSIONS:This report demonstrates a long-term positive treatment effect using chemotherapy followed by sunitinib in an advanced thymic carcinoma. We are not aware of other reports of pediatric patients with metastatic thymic carcinoma treated with sunitinib maintenance who maintained a durable response for this prolonged period of time.
PMID: 34486558
ISSN: 1536-3678
CID: 5061232

Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Improves Radiologist Performance in Skeletal Age Assessment: A Prospective Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

Eng, David K; Khandwala, Nishith B; Long, Jin; Fefferman, Nancy R; Lala, Shailee V; Strubel, Naomi A; Milla, Sarah S; Filice, Ross W; Sharp, Susan E; Towbin, Alexander J; Francavilla, Michael L; Kaplan, Summer L; Ecklund, Kirsten; Prabhu, Sanjay P; Dillon, Brian J; Everist, Brian M; Anton, Christopher G; Bittman, Mark E; Dennis, Rebecca; Larson, David B; Seekins, Jayne M; Silva, Cicero T; Zandieh, Arash R; Langlotz, Curtis P; Lungren, Matthew P; Halabi, Safwan S
Background Previous studies suggest that use of artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms as diagnostic aids may improve the quality of skeletal age assessment, though these studies lack evidence from clinical practice. Purpose To compare the accuracy and interpretation time of skeletal age assessment on hand radiograph examinations with and without the use of an AI algorithm as a diagnostic aid. Materials and Methods In this prospective randomized controlled trial, the accuracy of skeletal age assessment on hand radiograph examinations was performed with (n = 792) and without (n = 739) the AI algorithm as a diagnostic aid. For examinations with the AI algorithm, the radiologist was shown the AI interpretation as part of their routine clinical work and was permitted to accept or modify it. Hand radiographs were interpreted by 93 radiologists from six centers. The primary efficacy outcome was the mean absolute difference between the skeletal age dictated into the radiologists' signed report and the average interpretation of a panel of four radiologists not using a diagnostic aid. The secondary outcome was the interpretation time. A linear mixed-effects regression model with random center- and radiologist-level effects was used to compare the two experimental groups. Results Overall mean absolute difference was lower when radiologists used the AI algorithm compared with when they did not (5.36 months vs 5.95 months; P = .04). The proportions at which the absolute difference exceeded 12 months (9.3% vs 13.0%, P = .02) and 24 months (0.5% vs 1.8%, P = .02) were lower with the AI algorithm than without it. Median radiologist interpretation time was lower with the AI algorithm than without it (102 seconds vs 142 seconds, P = .001). Conclusion Use of an artificial intelligence algorithm improved skeletal age assessment accuracy and reduced interpretation times for radiologists, although differences were observed between centers. Clinical trial registration no. NCT03530098 © RSNA, 2021 Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Rubin in this issue.
PMID: 34581608
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 5079132

Osteomyelitis in an Unusual Location With an Atypical Presentation: A Case Report and Review of the Literature of Scapular Osteomyelitis in Pediatric Patients

Gerber, Nicole; Fawcett, Kelsey; Bittman, Mark; Beiner, Joshua
ABSTRACT/UNASSIGNED:Bacterial osteomyelitis of the scapula is rare in pediatric patients. When it occurs, it usually affects young infants and patients often exhibit fever and functional limitation of the extremity. We present a case of a 12-year-old boy with subacute bacterial scapular osteomyelitis and a normal physical examination. The patient was briefly treated with intravenous antibiotics and then transitioned to oral antibiotics to complete a 4-week course for methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis.
PMID: 33651767
ISSN: 1535-1815
CID: 4801362

Preserving Radiology Resident Education During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Simulated Daily Readout

Recht, Michael P; Fefferman, Nancy R; Bittman, Mark E; Dane, Bari; Fritz, Jan; Hoffmann, Jason C; Hood, Joseph; Mercado, Cecilia L; Mahajan, Sonia; Sheth, Monica M
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:The educational value of the daily resident readout, a vital component of resident training, has been markedly diminished due to a significant decrease in imaging volume and case mix diversity. The goal of this study was to create a "simulated" daily readout (SDR) to restore the educational value of the daily readout. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:To create the SDR the following tasks were performed; selection of cases for a daily worklist for each resident rotation, comprising a combination of normal and abnormal cases; determination of the correct number of cases and the appropriate mix of imaging modalities for each worklist; development of an "educational" environment consisting of separate "instances" of both our Picture Archive Communication System and reporting systems; and the anonymization of all of the cases on the worklists. Surveys of both residents and faculty involved in the SDR were performed to assess its effectiveness. RESULTS:Thirty-two residents participated in the SDR. The daily worklists for the first 20 days of the SDR included 3682 cases. An average of 480 cases per day was dictated by the residents. Surveys of the residents and the faculty involved in the SDR demonstrated that both agreed that the SDR effectively mimics a resident's daily work on rotations and preserves resident education during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 crisis. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The development of the SDR provided an effective method of preserving the educational value of the daily readout experience of radiology residents, despite severe decreases in imaging exam volume and case mix diversity during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic.
PMID: 32553278
ISSN: 1878-4046
CID: 4484992

Visualization of the normal appendix in children: feasibility of a single contrast-enhanced radial gradient recalled echo MRI sequence

Lala, Shailee V; Strubel, Naomi; Nocera, Nicole; Bittman, Mark E; Fefferman, Nancy R
BACKGROUND:Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) assessment for appendicitis is limited by exam time and patient cooperation. The radially sampled 3-dimensional (3-D) T1-weighted, gradient recalled echo sequence (radial GRE) is a free-breathing, motion robust sequence that may be useful in evaluating appendicitis in children. OBJECTIVE:To compare the rate of detection of the normal appendix with contrast-enhanced radial GRE versus contrast-enhanced 3-D GRE and a multi-sequence study including contrast-enhanced radial GRE. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:This was a retrospective study of patients ages 7-18 years undergoing abdominal-pelvic contrast-enhanced MRI between Jan. 1, 2012, and April 1, 2016. Visualization of the appendix was assessed by consensus between two pediatric radiologists. The rate of detection of the appendix for each sequence and combination of sequences was compared using a McNemar test. RESULTS:The rate of detection of the normal appendix on contrast-enhanced radial GRE was significantly higher than on contrast-enhanced 3-D GRE (76% vs. 57.3%, P=0.003). The rate of detection of the normal appendix with multi-sequence MRI including contrast-enhanced radial GRE was significantly higher than on contrast-enhanced 3-D GRE (81.3% vs. 57%, P<0.001). There was no significant difference between the rate of detection of the normal appendix on contrast-enhanced radial GRE alone and multi-sequence MRI including contrast-enhanced radial GRE (76% vs. 81.3%, P=0.267). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Contrast-enhanced radial GRE allows superior detection of the normal appendix compared to contrast-enhanced 3-D GRE. The rate of detection of the normal appendix on contrast-enhanced radial GRE alone is nearly as good as when the contrast-enhanced radial GRE is interpreted with additional sequences.
PMID: 30783687
ISSN: 1432-1998
CID: 3686192

Adaptive bulk motion exclusion for improved robustness of abdominal magnetic resonance imaging

Stemkens, Bjorn; Benkert, Thomas; Chandarana, Hersh; Bittman, Mark E; Van den Berg, Cornelis A T; Lagendijk, Jan J W; Sodickson, Daniel K; Tijssen, Rob H N; Block, Kai Tobias
Non-Cartesian magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences have shown great promise for abdominal examination during free breathing, but break down in the presence of bulk patient motion (i.e. voluntary or involuntary patient movement resulting in translation, rotation or elastic deformations of the body). This work describes a data-consistency-driven image stabilization technique that detects and excludes bulk movements during data acquisition. Bulk motion is identified from changes in the signal intensity distribution across different elements of a multi-channel receive coil array. A short free induction decay signal is acquired after excitation and used as a measure to determine alterations in the load distribution. The technique has been implemented on a clinical MR scanner and evaluated in the abdomen. Six volunteers were scanned and two radiologists scored the reconstructions. To show the applicability to other body areas, additional neck and knee images were acquired. Data corrupted by bulk motion were successfully detected and excluded from image reconstruction. An overall increase in image sharpness and reduction of streaking and shine-through artifacts were seen in the volunteer study, as well as in the neck and knee scans. The proposed technique enables automatic real-time detection and exclusion of bulk motion during MR examinations without user interaction. It may help to improve the reliability of pediatric MRI examinations without the use of sedation.
PMCID:5643254
PMID: 28885742
ISSN: 1099-1492
CID: 2688542

Kidney volume and ambulatory blood pressure in children

Gurusinghe, Shari; Palvanov, Arkadiy; Bittman, Mark E; Singer, Pamela; Frank, Rachel; Chorny, Nataliya; Infante, Lulette; Sethna, Christine B
Low nephron number has been shown to be a risk factor for hypertension (HTN) in adulthood. Kidney volume may serve as a surrogate marker for nephron mass. The relationship between kidney volume and ambulatory blood pressure (BP) in the pediatric population is not known. A retrospective chart review of children younger than 21 years who were evaluated for HTN was performed. Twenty-four-hour BP and ultrasonography data were obtained. Multiple regression was used to examine associations between BP and kidney volume. Of 84 children (mean age 13.87 years, 72.6% males), 54 had HTN. Systolic BP index during the awake, sleep, and 24-hour periods (all P
PMID: 27982509
ISSN: 1751-7176
CID: 2363692

Visualization of the normal appendix in children on MRI using radial vibe - A contrast enhanced, free-breathing, radially sampled, 3D T1-weighted, gradient-echo sequence [Meeting Abstract]

Lala, S; Nocera, N; Bittman, M; Strubel, N; Babb, J; Fefferman, N
Disclosures: All authors have disclosed no financial interests, arrangements or affiliations in the context of this activity. Purpose or Case Report: Current MRI evaluation of appendicitis is limited by duration of examination and patient cooperation. The radially sampled 3D T1 weighted, gradient recalled echo sequence (radial VIBE) is a free-breathing, motion robust sequence that may prove useful in the evaluation of appendicitis in children. The purpose of this investigation is to determine the detection rate of the normal appendix with contrast enhanced (CE) radial VIBE alone compared with CE conventional 3D gradient recalled echo volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (conventional VIBE) alone and multi-sequence abdominal pelvic MRI including CE radial VIBE. Methods& Materials:We conducted a retrospective, HIPAA compliant and IRB approved study of patients between 7 and 18 years of age who underwent an abdominal and pelvic contrast enhanced MRI between January 1, 2012 and April 1, 2016. Patients with active right lower quadrant inflammation, pelvic masses, or history of appendectomy were excluded. Visualization of the appendix was assessed by two pediatric radiologists with Certificates of Added Qualification by consensus on the following sequences: CE radial VIBE only, CE conventional VIBE only, and multi-sequence MRI which included CE radial VIBE and at least an axial or coronal single shot fast spin echo (SSFSE) or axial T2 weighted spin echo with fat suppression. The detection rates of the appendix for each sequence or combination of sequences were compared with a McNemar test. Results: Ninety-six patients met inclusion criteria. The detection rate of the normal appendix on CE radial VIBE was significantly higher than on CE conventional VIBE (76% vs 57.3%, p=0.003). The detection rate of the normal appendix with multi-sequence MRI was significantly higher than on CE conventional VIBE (81.3% vs 57%, p<0.001). There was no significant difference between the detection rate of the normal appendix on CE radial VIBE and multi-sequence MRI (76% vs 81.3%, p=0.267). When the appendix was not visualized on the CE radial VIBE (n=23) but detected on the multi-sequence MRI (n=9), it was most often visualized on SSFSE (n=8). Conclusions: CE radial VIBE allows superior detection of the normal appendix compared to CE conventional VIBE. The detection rate of the normal appendix on CE radial VIBE alone is nearly as good as when the CE radial VIBE is interpreted with additional sequences
EMBASE:615734017
ISSN: 1432-1998
CID: 2550212

Aortic mass in a newborn infant with respiratory distress

Vaz, MJ; Bhatla, T; Bittman, M; Fisher, J; Howell, H
Thrombotic disease is rare in neonates. Many of the cases reported in literature are attributed to the placement of central catheters. We report on a case of aortic thrombosis in a newborn infant with significant respiratory distress due to meconium aspiration, necessitating intubation and placement of central catheters. Due to the location and size of the thrombus in our case, various subspecialties were involved, which ultimately guided therapy to anti-coagulate the patient
SCOPUS:85025608808
ISSN: 2213-5766
CID: 2652382