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A Dataset for Understanding Radiologist-Artificial Intelligence Collaboration
Moehring, Alex; Kutwal, Manasi; Huang, Ray; Banerjee, Oishi; Jacobi, Adam; Eber, Corey; Mendoza, Dexter; Chung, Mike; Dayan, Etan; Gupta, Yogesh; Bui, Tan D T; Truong, Steven Q H; Pareek, Anuj; Langlotz, Curtis P; Lungren, Matthew P; Agarwal, Nikhil; Rajpurkar, Pranav; Salz, Tobias
This dataset, Collab-CXR, provides a unique resource to study human-AI collaboration in chest X-ray interpretation. We present experimentally generated data from 227 professional radiologists who assessed 324 historical cases under varying information conditions: with and without AI assistance, and with and without clinical history. Using a custom-designed interface, we collected probabilistic assessments for 104 thoracic pathologies using a comprehensive hierarchical reporting structure. This dataset is the largest known comparison of human-AI collaborative performance to either AI or humans alone in radiology, offering assessments across an extensive range of pathologies with rich metadata on radiologist characteristics and decision-making processes. Multiple experimental designs enable both within-subject and between-subject analyses. Researchers can leverage this dataset to investigate how radiologists incorporate AI assistance, factors influencing collaborative effectiveness, and impacts on diagnostic accuracy, speed, and confidence across different cases and pathologies. By enabling rigorous study of human-AI integration in clinical workflows, this dataset can inform AI tool development, implementation strategies, and ultimately improve patient care through optimized collaboration in medical imaging.
PMCID:12049457
PMID: 40319039
ISSN: 2052-4463
CID: 5972982
Incidental Apical Pleuroparenchymal Scarring on Computed Tomography: Diagnostic Yield, Progression, Morphologic Features and Clinical Significance
Toussie, Danielle; Finkelstein, Mark; Mendoza, Dexter; Concepcion, Jose; Stojanovska, Jadranka; Azour, Lea; Ko, Jane P; Moore, William H; Singh, Ayushi; Sasson, Arielle; Bhattacharji, Priya; Eber, Corey
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Apical pleuroparenchymal scarring (APPS) is commonly seen on chest computed tomography (CT), though the imaging and clinical features, to the best of our knowledge, have never been studied. The purpose was to understand APPS's typical morphologic appearance and associated clinical features. PATIENTS AND METHODS/METHODS:A random generator selected 1000 adult patients from all 21516 chest CTs performed at urban outpatient centers from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016. Patients with obscuring apical diseases were excluded to eliminate confounding factors. After exclusions, 780 patients (median age: 64 y; interquartile range: 56 to 72 y; 55% males) were included for analysis. Two radiologists evaluated the lung apices of each CT for the extent of abnormality in the axial plane (mild: <5 mm, moderate: 5 to 10 mm, severe: >10 mm), craniocaudal plane (extension halfway to the aortic arch, more than halfway, vs below the arch), the predominant pattern (nodular vs reticular and symmetry), and progression. Cohen kappa coefficient was used to assess radiologists' agreement in scoring. Ordinal logistic regression was used to determine associations of clinical and imaging variables with APPS. RESULTS:APPS was present on 65% (507/780) of chest CTs (54% mild axial; 80% mild craniocaudal). The predominant pattern was nodular and symmetric. Greater age, female sex, lower body mass index, greater height, and white race were associated with more extensive APPS. APPS was not found to be associated with lung cancer in this cohort. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Classifying APPS by the extent of disease in the axial or craniocaudal planes, in addition to the predominant pattern, enabled statistically significant associations to be determined, which may aid in understanding the pathophysiology of apical scarring and potential associated risks.
PMID: 38798201
ISSN: 1536-0237
CID: 5663232
Barotrauma in COVID 19: Incidence, pathophysiology, and effect on prognosis
Steinberger, Sharon; Finkelstein, Mark; Pagano, Andrew; Manna, Sayan; Toussie, Danielle; Chung, Michael; Bernheim, Adam; Concepcion, Jose; Gupta, Sean; Eber, Corey; Dua, Sakshi; Jacobi, Adam H
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To investigate the incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of barotrauma (pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema) in mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients. To describe the chest radiography patterns of barotrauma and understand the development in relation to mechanical ventilation and patient mortality. METHODS:We performed a retrospective study of 363 patients with COVID-19 from March 1 to April 8, 2020. Primary outcomes were pneumomediastinum or subcutaneous emphysema with or without pneumothorax, pneumoperitoneum, or pneumoretroperitoneum. The secondary outcomes were length of intubation and death. In patients with pneumomediastinum and/or subcutaneous emphysema, we conducted an imaging review to determine the timeline of barotrauma development. RESULTS:Forty three out of 363 (12%) patients developed barotrauma radiographically. The median time to development of either pneumomediastinum or subcutaneous emphysema was 2 days (IQR 1.0-4.5) after intubation and the median time to pneumothorax was 7 days (IQR 2.0-10.0). The overall incidence of pneumothorax was 28/363 (8%) with an incidence of 17/43 (40%) in the barotrauma cohort and 11/320 (3%) in those without barotrauma (p ≤ 0.001). In total, 257/363 (71%) patients died with an increase in mortality in those with barotrauma 33/43 (77%) vs. 224/320 (70%). When adjusting for covariates, barotrauma was associated with increased odds of death (OR 2.99, 95% CI 1.25-7.17). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Barotrauma is a frequent complication of mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients. In comparison to intubated COVID-19 patients without barotrauma, there is a higher rate of pneumothorax and an increased risk of death.
PMCID:9238026
PMID: 35926316
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 5364902
Portable Chest Radiography as an Exclusionary Test for Adverse Clinical Outcomes During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic
Pagano, Andrew; Finkelstein, Mark; Overbey, Jessica; Steinberger, Sharon; Ellison, Trevor; Manna, Sayan; Toussie, Danielle; Cedillo, Mario; Jacobi, Adam; Gupta, Yogesh S; Bernheim, Adam; Chung, Michael; Eber, Corey; Fayad, Zahi A; Concepcion, Jose
BACKGROUND:Chest radiography (CXR) often is performed in the acute setting to help understand the extent of respiratory disease in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), but a clearly defined role for negative chest radiograph results in assessing patients has not been described. RESEARCH QUESTION/OBJECTIVE:Is portable CXR an effective exclusionary test for future adverse clinical outcomes in patients suspected of having COVID-19? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS/METHODS:Charts of consecutive patients suspected of having COVID-19 at five EDs in New York City between March 19, 2020, and April 23, 2020, were reviewed. Patients were categorized based on absence of findings on initial CXR. The primary outcomes were hospital admission, mechanical ventilation, ARDS, and mortality. RESULTS:Three thousand two hundred forty-five adult patients, 474 (14.6%) with negative initial CXR results, were reviewed. Among all patients, negative initial CXR results were associated with a low probability of future adverse clinical outcomes, with negative likelihood ratios of 0.27 (95%Â CI, 0.23-0.31) for hospital admission, 0.24 (95%Â CI, 0.16-0.37) for mechanical ventilation, 0.19 (95%Â CI, 0.09-0.40) for ARDS, and 0.38 (95%Â CI, 0.29-0.51) for mortality. Among the subset of 955 patients younger than 65 years and with a duration of symptoms of at least 5Â days, no patients with negative CXR results died, and the negative likelihood ratios were 0.17 (95%Â CI, 0.12-0.25) for hospital admission, 0.09 (95%Â CI, 0.02-0.36) for mechanical ventilation, and 0.09 (95%Â CI, 0.01-0.64) for ARDS. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:Initial CXR in adult patients suspected of having COVID-19 is a strong exclusionary test for hospital admission, mechanical ventilation, ARDS, and mortality. The value of CXR as an exclusionary test for adverse clinical outcomes is highest among young adults, patients with few comorbidities, and those with a prolonged duration of symptoms.
PMCID:7844357
PMID: 33516703
ISSN: 1931-3543
CID: 4859082
Combining Initial Radiographs and Clinical Variables Improves Deep Learning Prognostication in Patients with COVID-19 from the Emergency Department
Kwon, Young Joon Fred; Toussie, Danielle; Finkelstein, Mark; Cedillo, Mario A; Maron, Samuel Z; Manna, Sayan; Voutsinas, Nicholas; Eber, Corey; Jacobi, Adam; Bernheim, Adam; Gupta, Yogesh Sean; Chung, Michael S; Fayad, Zahi A; Glicksberg, Benjamin S; Oermann, Eric K; Costa, Anthony B
Purpose/UNASSIGNED:To train a deep learning classification algorithm to predict chest radiograph severity scores and clinical outcomes in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Materials and Methods/UNASSIGNED:= 110) populations. Bootstrapping was used to compute CIs. Results/UNASSIGNED:The model trained on the chest radiograph severity score produced the following areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUCs): 0.80 (95% CI: 0.73, 0.88) for the chest radiograph severity score, 0.76 (95% CI: 0.68, 0.84) for admission, 0.66 (95% CI: 0.56, 0.75) for intubation, and 0.59 (95% CI: 0.49, 0.69) for death. The model trained on clinical variables produced an AUC of 0.64 (95% CI: 0.55, 0.73) for intubation and an AUC of 0.59 (95% CI: 0.50, 0.68) for death. Combining chest radiography and clinical variables increased the AUC of intubation and death to 0.88 (95% CI: 0.79, 0.96) and 0.82 (95% CI: 0.72, 0.91), respectively. Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:© RSNA, 2020.
PMCID:7754832
PMID: 33928257
ISSN: 2638-6100
CID: 4858862
Portable chest X-ray in coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19): A pictorial review
Jacobi, Adam; Chung, Michael; Bernheim, Adam; Eber, Corey
As the global pandemic of coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) progresses, many physicians in a wide variety of specialties continue to play pivotal roles in diagnosis and management. In radiology, much of the literature to date has focused on chest CT manifestations of COVID-19 (Zhou et al. [1]; Chung et al. [2]). However, due to infection control issues related to patient transport to CT suites, the inefficiencies introduced in CT room decontamination, and lack of CT availability in parts of the world, portable chest radiography (CXR) will likely be the most commonly utilized modality for identification and follow up of lung abnormalities. In fact, the American College of Radiology (ACR) notes that CT decontamination required after scanning COVID-19 patients may disrupt radiological service availability and suggests that portable chest radiography may be considered to minimize the risk of cross-infection (American College of Radiology [3]). Furthermore, in cases of high clinical suspicion for COVID-19, a positive CXR may obviate the need for CT. Additionally, CXR utilization for early disease detection may also play a vital role in areas around the world with limited access to reliable real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) COVID testing. The purpose of this pictorial review article is to describe the most common manifestations and patterns of lung abnormality on CXR in COVID-19 in order to equip the medical community in its efforts to combat this pandemic.
PMCID:7141645
PMID: 32302927
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 5972972
Delayed diagnosis of COVID-19 in a 34-year-old man with atypical presentation [Case Report]
Harkin, Timothy J; Rurak, Kevin M; Martins, John; Eber, Corey; Szporn, Arnold H; Beasley, Mary Beth
PMID: 32437648
ISSN: 2213-2619
CID: 5799542
COVID-19 ventilator barotrauma management: less is more
Housman, Brian; Jacobi, Adam; Carollo, Andrea; Nobel, Tamar; Eber, Corey; Acquah, Samuel; Powell, Charles; Kaufman, Andrew; Lee, Dong-Seok; Nicastri, Daniel; Hakami, Ardeshir; Song, Kimberly; Kohli-Seth, Roopa; Flores, Raja
BACKGROUND:COVID-19 patients requiring mechanical ventilation may develop significant pneumomediastinum and sub-cutaneous emphysema without associated pneumothorax (SWAP). Prophylactic chest tube placement or sub-fascial "blowholes" are usually recommended to prevent tension pneumothorax and clinical decline. Risk of iatrogenic lung injury and release of virus into the environment is high. Incidence and conservative management data of such barotraumatic complications during the COVID-19 pandemic are lacking. METHODS:All patients with mediastinal air and SWAP evaluated by the department of Thoracic Surgery at the Mount Sinai Hospital between March 30 and April 10, 2020 were identified. All patients without pneumothorax were treated conservatively with daily chest x-ray and observation. Three patients had prophylactic chest tube placement prior to the study period without thoracic surgery consultation. RESULTS:There were 29 cases of mediastinal air with SWAP out of 171 COVID positive intubated patients (17.0%) who were treated conservatively. Patients were intubated for an average of 2.4 days before SWAP was identified. 12 patients (41%) had improvement or resolution without intervention. Two patients progressed to pneumothorax 3 and 8 days following initial presentation. Both had chest tubes placed without incident before there were any changes in oxygenation, hemodynamics, supportive medications, or ventilator settings. There were 3 patients who had percutaneous tubes placed before the study period all of whom had significant worsening of their sub-cutaneous air and air leak. CONCLUSIONS:Conservative management of massive sub-cutaneous emphysema without pneumothorax in COVID-19 patients is safe and limits viral exposure to healthcare workers. Placement of chest tubes is discouraged unless a definite sizable pneumothorax develops.
PMCID:7791221
PMID: 33437774
ISSN: 2305-5839
CID: 5799552
Spontaneous subcutaneous emphysema and pneumomediastinum in non-intubated patients with COVID-19 [Case Report]
Manna, Sayan; Maron, Samuel Z; Cedillo, Mario A; Voutsinas, Nicholas; Toussie, Danielle; Finkelstein, Mark; Steinberger, Sharon; Chung, Michael; Bernheim, Adam; Eber, Corey; Gupta, Yogesh Sean; Concepcion, Jose; Libes, Richard; Jacobi, Adam
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:We describe the presenting characteristics and hospital course of 11 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) patients who developed spontaneous subcutaneous emphysema (SE) with or without pneumomediastinum (SPM) in the absence of prior mechanical ventilation. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:A total of 11 non-intubated COVID-19 patients (8 male and 3 female, median age 61Â years) developed SE and SPM between March 15 and April 30, 2020 at a multi-center urban health system in New York City. Demographics (age, gender, smoking status, comorbid conditions, and body-mass index), clinical variables (temperature, oxygen saturation, and symptoms), and laboratory values (white blood cell count, C-reactive protein, D-dimer, and peak interleukin-6) were collected. Chest radiography (CXR) and computed tomography (CT) were analyzed for SE, SPM, and pneumothorax by a board-certified cardiothoracic-fellowship trained radiologist. RESULTS:Eleven non-intubated patients developed SE, 36% (4/11) of whom had SE on their initial CXR. Concomitant SPM was apparent in 91% (10/11) of patients, and 45% (5/11) also developed pneumothorax. Patients developed SE on average 13.3Â days (SD: 6.3) following symptom onset. No patients reported a history of smoking. The most common comorbidities included hypertension (6/11), diabetes mellitus (5/11), asthma (3/11), dyslipidemia (3/11), and renal disease (2/11). Four (36%) patients expired during hospitalization. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:SE and SPM were observed in a cohort of 11 non-intubated COVID-19 patients without any known cause or history of invasive ventilation. Further investigation is required to elucidate the underlying mechanism in this patient population.
PMCID:7448957
PMID: 32871424
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 4859052
Clinical and Chest Radiography Features Determine Patient Outcomes in Young and Middle-aged Adults with COVID-19
Toussie, Danielle; Voutsinas, Nicholas; Finkelstein, Mark; Cedillo, Mario A; Manna, Sayan; Maron, Samuel Z; Jacobi, Adam; Chung, Michael; Bernheim, Adam; Eber, Corey; Concepcion, Jose; Fayad, Zahi A; Gupta, Yogesh Sean
Background Chest radiography has not been validated for its prognostic utility in evaluating patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Purpose To analyze the prognostic value of a chest radiograph severity scoring system for younger (nonelderly) patients with COVID-19 at initial presentation to the emergency department (ED); outcomes of interest included hospitalization, intubation, prolonged stay, sepsis, and death. Materials and Methods In this retrospective study, patients between the ages of 21 and 50 years who presented to the ED of an urban multicenter health system from March 10 to March 26, 2020, with COVID-19 confirmation on real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction were identified. Each patient's ED chest radiograph was divided into six zones and examined for opacities by two cardiothoracic radiologists, and scores were collated into a total concordant lung zone severity score. Clinical and laboratory variables were collected. Multivariable logistic regression was used to evaluate the relationship between clinical parameters, chest radiograph scores, and patient outcomes. Results The study included 338 patients: 210 men (62%), with median age of 39 years (interquartile range, 31-45 years). After adjustment for demographics and comorbidities, independent predictors of hospital admission (n = 145, 43%) were chest radiograph severity score of 2 or more (odds ratio, 6.2; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.5, 11; P < .001) and obesity (odds ratio, 2.4 [95% CI: 1.1, 5.4] or morbid obesity). Among patients who were admitted, a chest radiograph score of 3 or more was an independent predictor of intubation (n = 28) (odds ratio, 4.7; 95% CI: 1.8, 13; P = .002) as was hospital site. No significant difference was found in primary outcomes across race and ethnicity or those with a history of tobacco use, asthma, or diabetes mellitus type II. Conclusion For patients aged 21-50 years with coronavirus disease 2019 presenting to the emergency department, a chest radiograph severity score was predictive of risk for hospital admission and intubation. © RSNA, 2020 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
PMID: 32407255
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 4859022