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Adoption of an Integrated Radiology Reading Room Within a Urologic Oncology Clinic: Initial Experience in Facilitating Clinician Consultations
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Lepor, Herbert; Taneja, Samir S; Recht, Michael P
PURPOSE: The authors describe their initial experience in implementing an integrated radiology reading room within a urologic oncology clinic, including the frequency and nature of clinician consultations and the perceived impact on patient management by clinicians. METHODS: A radiology reading room was established within an office-based urologic oncology clinic in proximity to the surgeon's work area. A radiologist was present in this reading room for a 3-hour shift each day. The frequency and nature of consultations during these shifts were recorded. Also, the clinic's staff completed a survey assessing perceptions of the impact of the integrated reading room on patient management. RESULTS: One hundred two consultations occurred during 57 included dates (average, 1.8 consultations per shift): 52% for review of external cases brought in by patients on discs, 43% for review of internal cases, and 5% for direct review by the radiologist of imaging with patients. The maximum number of consultations during a single shift was 8. All of the clinic's urologists indicated that >90% of consultations benefited patient care. The clinicians indicated tendencies to view consultations as affecting management in the majority of cases, to be more likely to seek consultation for outside imaging when the radiologist was on site, and to be less likely to repeat outside imaging when the radiologist was on site. CONCLUSIONS: The integrated reading room within the clinic has potential to improve the quality of care, for instance by facilitating increased review of outside imaging studies and thereby potentially reducing duplicate ordering and by enabling occasional direct image review with patients by radiologists.
PMID: 24485593
ISSN: 1546-1440
CID: 801322
Abdominopelvic MRI for lesion characterization after prior imaging: factors associated with likelihood of added value
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Heacock, Laura
OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this article is to evaluate factors associated with the likelihood that abdominopelvic MRI examinations performed for characterization of lesions identified on other imaging modalities will provide information that adds value to patient management. MATERIALS AND METHODS. One thousand one hundred thirty-two lesions in 863 patients undergoing MRI for further characterization after detection by an alternative imaging modality were identified. Reports of the MRI examinations and of previous studies were reviewed to classify cases in terms of patient-, examination-, and lesion-related factors. MRI reports were also classified in terms of measures reflecting inclusion of content with the potential to add value to patient management. Data were analyzed using logistic regression for correlated data. RESULTS. MRI provided a definitive diagnosis in 79.2% (897/1132), upgraded the severity of the favored diagnosis in 5.3% (60/1132), downgraded the severity of the favored diagnosis in 34.5% (390/1132), and showed an absence of the suspected lesion in 12.1% (137/1132) of cases. Provision of a definitive diagnosis (most common in liver, kidney, gallbladder, bowel, myometrium, and adrenal gland) was significantly associated with the organ containing the lesion (p < 0.001). A change in severity of the favored diagnosis (most common after CT or PET/CT) and the absence of the suspected lesion (most common after PET/CT) were significantly associated with the prior imaging modality (p = 0.001). Among the lesions that were upgraded in severity, 76.7% subsequently underwent intervention or change in medical management. CONCLUSION. Abdominopelvic MRI examinations performed for further lesion characterization may affect clinical management in a high fraction of cases, the likelihood of which is influenced by factors related to the given examination.
PMID: 24758657
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 918012
Utility of conventional and diffusion-weighted MRI features in distinguishing benign from malignant endometrial lesions
Kierans, Andrea S; Bennett, Genevieve L; Haghighi, Mohammad; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B
PURPOSE: To evaluate the utility of conventional MRI and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in differentiating benign from malignant endometrial lesions. METHODS: 52 patients with an abnormal endometrium on MRI and subsequent pathologic evaluation (35 benign, 17 malignant) were included. Two radiologists (R1, R2) independently evaluated endometrial abnormalities for characteristics on conventional MRI and DWI. Findings were assessed using unpaired t-tests, Fisher's exact test, and multi-variate logistic regression. RESULTS: Findings with significantly higher frequency in malignant abnormalities were: presence of irregularly marginated endometrial lesion (R1: 71% vs. 34%, R2: 94% vs. 26%), irregular endo-myometrial interface on T2WI (R1: 77% vs. 26%, R2: 94% vs. 29%), irregular endo-myometrial interface on post-contrast T1WI (R1: 82% vs. 23%, R2: 88% vs. 20%), increased signal on high b-value DWI (R1: 82% vs. 20%, R2: 94% vs. 20%), decreased ADC (R1: 88 vs. 40%, R2: 94% vs. 20%) (all p<0.001, both readers). Endometrial thickness, presence of any focal endometrial lesion regardless of contour, diameter of endometrial lesion, endometrial heterogeneity on T2WI, decreased T2 signal, and increased endometrial enhancement, failed to show significant differences between groups (all p>/=0.159, both readers). At multivariate analysis, for R1, irregular endo-myometrial interface on post-contrast T1WI and increased DWI signal were significant independent predictors of malignancy (AUC=0.89); for R2, only increased DWI signal was a significant independent predictor of malignancy (AUC=0.87). CONCLUSION: Abnormal signal on DWI and irregularity of either the endo-myometrial interface or focal endometrial lesion were the most helpful MRI features in differentiating benign from malignant endometrial abnormalities.
PMID: 24380638
ISSN: 0720-048x
CID: 763752
US of Incidental Adnexal Cysts: Adherence of Radiologists to the 2010 Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound Guidelines
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Kierans, Andrea S
Purpose To retrospectively evaluate the adherence of radiologists to the 2010 Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound (SRU) guidelines for management of adnexal cysts. Materials and Methods One radiologist reviewed the interpreting radiologists' reports for 398 adnexal cysts detected at ultrasonography in 398 patients (mean age +/- standard deviation, 41.1 years +/- 14.3; range, 18-87 years) and classified the management recommendations according to adherence to SRU guidelines. Recommendations that were not adherent were classified as overmanagement, undermanagement, or incomplete. The effects of menopausal status, cyst size and other features, and the individual interpreting radiologist on adherence were assessed by using chi(2) tests, and the association of these factors with over- and undermanagement was identified. Results Overall adherence was 59%; overmanagement, 27%; undermanagement, 9%; and incomplete, 6%. Menopausal status, cyst size, and other cyst features significantly affected adherence (P < .001). For evaluation of premenopausal patients, adherence was 63% (overmanagement, 30%) and of postmenopausal patients, 42% (undermanagement, 26%). For evaluation of cysts 1-3 cm in size, adherence was 65% (overmanagement, 21%); for cysts 3-5 cm, 33% (overmanagement, 49%); for cysts 5-7 cm, 47% (overmanagement, 20%); for cysts larger than 7 cm, 77% (over- and undermanagement, 12% each). Recommendations were adherent in most instances for corpora lutea (88%), simple cysts (56%), and cysts suggestive of benign diagnosis (60%), or with a nodule or multiple thin or thick septations (60%-100%). Cysts with recommentations for overmanagement in most instances were hemorrhagic (59%) and those with a single thin septation (67%); 31% of cysts measuring 1-7 cm in postmenopausal patients were undermanaged. Adherence varied significantly among radiologists (40%-75% adherence among radiologists who interpreted 20 or more examinations; P = .004). Conclusion Adherence to SRU guidelines for management of adnexal cysts at our institution was 59%. Overmanagement generally occurred for physiologic cysts in premenopausal patients; undermanagement was observed for simple cysts in postmenopausal patients. (c) RSNA, 2013.
PMID: 24475836
ISSN: 0033-8419
CID: 931772
MRI phenotype in renal cancer: is it clinically relevant?
Campbell, Naomi; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Pedrosa, Ivan
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is most commonly diagnosed as an incidental finding on cross-sectional imaging and represents a significant clinical challenge. Although most patients have a surgically curable lesion at the time of diagnosis, the variability in the biologic behavior of the different histologic subtypes and tumor grade of RCC, together with the increasing array of management options, creates uncertainty for the optimal clinical approach to individual patients. State-of-the-art magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides a comprehensive assessment of renal lesions that includes multiple forms of tissue contrast as well as functional parameters, which in turn provides information that helps to address this dilemma. In this article, we review this evolving and increasingly comprehensive role of MRI in the detection, characterization, perioperative evaluation, and assessment of the treatment response of renal neoplasms. We emphasize the ability of the imaging "phenotype" of renal masses on MRI to help predict the histologic subtype, grade, and clinical behavior of RCC.
PMCID:4484274
PMID: 24690616
ISSN: 0899-3459
CID: 931782
Complex cystic renal masses: Comparison of cyst complexity and Bosniak classification between 1.5T and 3T MRI
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Wehrli, Natasha E; Mussi, Thais C; Taneja, Samir S; Triolo, Michael J
PURPOSE: To retrospectively compare perceived complexity and Bosniak cyst classification of cystic renal lesions between 1.5T and 3T MRI. METHODS: 33 cystic renal lesions in 26 patients that underwent contrast-enhanced MRI at both 1.5T and 3T within a 12 month span were included. Two radiologists (R1, R2) independently assessed lesions, unaware of field strength, in terms of number of septations, septal thickening, mural thickening, presence of mural nodule, and Bosniak cyst category. Scores were compared between field strengths for each lesion. RESULTS: R1 observed increases in septal number, septal thickening, mural thickening, and presence of mural nodule at 3T in 8, 7, 4, and 2 lesions, and at 1.5T in 3, 3, 2, and 0 lesions, respectively; R2 observed increases in septal number, septal thickening, mural thickening, and presence of mural nodule at 3T in 3, 4, 3, and 0 lesions, and at 1.5T in 2, 0, 0, and 0 lesions, respectively. R1 provided higher Bosniak category at 3T in 9 cases and at 1.5T in 4 cases; R2 provided higher Bosniak category at 3T in 4 cases and at 1.5T in 0 cases. Higher scores at 3T than 1.5T were associated with differences in advised clinical management in 7/9 cases for R1 and 4/4 cases for R2. CONCLUSION: There was an overall tendency for both readers to upgrade cyst complexity and Bosniak cyst category at 3T than 1.5T, which impacted advised management. Thus, we suggest that serial MRI evaluation of cystic renal lesions be performed at constant field strength.
PMID: 24359883
ISSN: 0720-048x
CID: 763702
Combination of Increased Flip Angle, Radial k-Space Trajectory, and Free Breathing Acquisition for Improved Detection of a Biliary Variant at Living Donor Liver Transplant Evaluation Using Gadoxetic Acid-Enhanced MRCP
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Block, Tobias K; Hindman, Nicole; Vega, Emilio; Chandarana, Hersh
Gadoxetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) was performed for evaluation of living donor liver transplantation. T2-weighted MRCP and hepatobiliary-phase postcontrast MRCP showed an aberrant right posterior bile duct, although the precise variant was uncertain. Optimized hepatobiliary-phase MRCP was obtained using 3 sequence modifications: increased flip angle to improve contrast between the biliary tree and surrounding tissues; radial k-space sampling to minimize motion artifact; and free-breathing acquisition to improve signal-to-noise ratio and, in turn, spatial resolution (resolution of 1.28 x 1.28 x 1.5 mm). The optimized sequence demonstrated that the right posterior bile duct drained into the cystic duct, consistent with type 3C biliary variant, thus modifying surgical planning.
PMID: 24625601
ISSN: 0363-8715
CID: 851902
Impact of size of region-of-interest on differentiation of renal cell carcinoma and renal cysts on multi-phase CT: Preliminary findings
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Matza, Brent W; Portnoy, Elie; Melamed, Jonathan; Taneja, Samir S; Wehrli, Natasha E
INTRODUCTION: To assess impact of size of regions-of-interest (ROI) on differentiation of RCC and renal cysts using multi-phase CT, with focus on differentiating papillary RCC (pRCC) and cysts given known hypovascularity of pRCC. METHODS: 99 renal lesions (23 pRCC, 47 clear-cell RCC, 7 chromophobe RCC, 22 cysts) underwent multi-phase CT. Subjective presence of visual enhancement was recorded for each lesion. Whole-lesion (WL) ROIs, and small (=5mm2), medium (average size of small and large ROIs), and large (half of lesion diameter) peripherally located partial-lesion (PL) ROIs, were placed on non-contrast and nephrographic phases. Impact of ROI size in separating cysts from all RCC and from pRCC based on increased attenuation between phases was assessed using ROC analysis. RESULTS: Visual enhancement was perceived in 96% of ccRCC, 61% of pRCC, and 9% of cysts. AUCs for separating all RCC and cysts for WL-ROI and small, medium, and large PL-ROIs were 91%, 96%, 91% and 93%, and among lesions without visible enhancement were 60%, 79%, 67% and 67%. AUCs for separating pRCC and cysts for WL-ROI and small, medium, and large PL-ROIs were 78%, 92%, 82% and 84%, and among lesions without visible enhancement were 64%, 88%, 69% and 69%. CONCLUSION: Small PL-ROIs had higher accuracy than WL-ROI or other PL-ROIs in separating RCC from cysts, with greater impact in differentiating pRCC from cysts and differentiating lesions without visible enhancement. Thus, when evaluating renal lesions using multi-phase CT, we suggest placing small peripheral ROIs for highest accuracy in distinguishing renal malignancy and benign cysts.
PMID: 24239241
ISSN: 0720-048x
CID: 666882
Is there an association between radiologist turnaround time of emergency department abdominal CT studies and radiologic report quality?
Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Bonavita, John A; Foran, Mark P; Matza, Brent W; McMenamy, John M
The aim of this study was to assess for an association between radiologists' turnaround time (TAT) and report quality for emergency department (ED) abdominopelvic CT examinations. Reports of 60 consecutive ED abdominopelvic CT studies from five abdominal radiologists (300 total reports) were included. An ED radiologist, abdominal radiologist, and ED physician independently evaluated satisfaction with report content (1-10 scale), satisfaction with report clarity (1-10 scale), and extent to which the report advanced the patient on a previously published clinical spectrum scale (1-5 scale). TAT (time between completion of imaging and completion of the final report) and report quality were compared between radiologists using unpaired t tests; associations between TAT and report quality scores for individual radiologists were assessed using Pearson's correlation coefficients. The five radiologists' mean TAT varied from 35 to 53 min. There were significant differences in report content in half of comparisons between radiologists by observer 1 (p = 0.032) and in a minority of comparisons by observer 2 (p = 0.047), in report clarity in majority of comparisons by observer 1 (p = 0.031) and in a minority of comparisons by observer 2 (p = 0.010), and in impact on patient care in a minority of comparisons for all observers (p = 0.047). There were weak positive correlations between TAT and report content and clarity for three radiologists for observer 1 (r = 0.270-0.362) and no correlation between TAT and any report quality measure for remaining combinations of the five radiologists and three observers (r = -0.197 to +0.181). While both TAT and report quality vary between radiologists, these two factors were not associated for individual radiologists.
PMID: 24197655
ISSN: 1070-3004
CID: 666892
Prevalence of pelvic organ prolapse detected at dynamic MRI in women without history of pelvic floor dysfunction: Comparison of two reference lines
Rosenkrantz, A B; Lewis, M T; Yalamanchili, S; Lim, R P; Wong, S; Bennett, G L
AIM: To retrospectively evaluate the prevalence of pelvic organ prolapse as an incidental finding on dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using two different references lines. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty women with symptoms unrelated to pelvic floor dysfunction who underwent MRI including a dynamic sagittal true fast imaging with steady-state free precession (TrueFISP) sequence during straining were identified. Two radiologists in consensus used the pubococcygeal line (PCL) and mid-pubic line (MPL) to diagnose and grade prolapse in all three pelvic compartments. RESULTS: Cystocele was absent, mild, moderate, and severe in 88% (53/60), 7% (4/60), 5% (3/60), and 0% (0/60) of patients, respectively, using PCL, versus 78% (47/60), 13% (8/60), 5% (3/60), and 3% (2/60) of patients, respectively, using MPL. Vaginal prolapse was absent, mild, moderate, and severe in 95% (57/60), 5% (3/60), 0% (0/60), and 0% (0/60) of patients, respectively, using PCL, versus 80% (48/60), 17% (10/60), 3% (2/60), and 0% (0/60) of patients, respectively, using MPL. Rectal descent was absent, mild, moderate, and severe in 63% (38/60), 10% (6/60), 23% (14/60), and 3% (2/60) of patients, respectively, using PCL, versus 43% (26/60), 27% (16/60), 27% (16/60), and 3% (2/60) of patients, respectively, using MPL. No enterocele, peritoneocele, or muscular defect was identified. Two percent (1/60) of patients had mild rectocele, 8% (5/60) had abnormal vesico-urethral angle, and 25% (15/60) had abnormal levator plate angle. CONCLUSION: In asymptomatic women, dynamic MRI identified the greatest degrees of prolapse in the posterior compartment. The MPL consistently yielded greater frequency of prolapse than the PCL. Findings of pelvic organ prolapse may be observed in asymptomatic patients and are of uncertain significance, requiring correlation with clinical and physical examination findings.
PMID: 24290773
ISSN: 0009-9260
CID: 740932