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Incidentally Detected Mediastinal Mass on a Chest Radiograph

Halpenny, Darragh; Niu, Bowen; McGuinness, Georgeann; Bessich, Jamie; Berman, Philip; Lowy, Joseph; Ko, Jane
PMID: 28248588
ISSN: 2325-6621
CID: 2471142

Developing a Job Description for a Vice Chair of Education in Radiology: The ADVICER Template

Lewis, Petra J; Probyn, Linda; McGuinness, Georgeann; Nguyen, Jeremy; Mullins, Mark E; Resnik, Charles; Oldham, Sandra
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: The newly formed Alliance of Directors and Vice Chairs of Education in Radiology (ADVICER), a group within the Alliance for Clinician Educators in Radiology, identified an acute need for a generic job description template for Vice Chairs of Education in Radiology, a role that is being developed in many academic Departments of Radiology. Eighty-three percent of current members who responded to a survey had no detailed job description, and over half had no job description at all. Having a comprehensive and detailed job description is vital to developing this key position. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using the results of a survey sent to ADVICER members and seven Education Vice Chair job descriptions provided by members, the authors developed a detailed job description encompassing all potential elements of this position. RESULTS: Only 17% of survey respondents had a detailed job description. The role of an Education Vice Chair varies significantly between institutions in its scope and level of responsibilities. The resultant generic job description that was devised is intended to provide a template that would be modified by the candidate or the Department Chair. It is unlikely that any one individual would perform all the described activities. CONCLUSIONS: ADVICER has developed a comprehensive, flexible job description for Vice Chair of Education in Radiology that can be adapted by institutions as appropriate. It can be downloaded from http://aur.org/ADVICER/.
PMID: 25843902
ISSN: 1878-4046
CID: 1528192

Radiation therapy for stage I lung cancer detected on computed tomography screening: Results from the international early lung cancer action program

Buckstein, M; Rosenzweig, K; Henschke, C I; Yankelevitz, D F; Flores, R; Yip, R; Xu, D; McCauley, D I; Chen, M; Libby, D M; Smith, J P; Pasmantier, M; Altorki, N; Reeves, A P; Biancardi, A; Markowitz, S; Miller, A; Roberts, H; Patsios, D; Bauer, T; Aye, R; Austin, J H M; D'Souza, B M; Pearson, G D N; Cole, E; Naidich, D; McGuinness, G; Aylesworth, C; Rifkin, M; Kopel, S; Klippenstein, D; Kohman, L J; Scalzetti, E M; Sheppard, B; Thorsen, M K; Hansen, R; Khan, A; Shah, R; Thurer, R; Baxter, T; Vafai, D; Andaz, S; Mendelson, D S; Smith, M V; Meyers, P; Luedke, D; Heelan, R T; Ginsberg, M S; Matalon, T A S; Odzer, S -L; Mayfield, W; Olsen, D; Grannis, F; Rotter, A; Scheinberg, P; Ray, D; Salvatore, M; Wiernik, P H; Korst, R; Mullen, D; DeCunzo, L; Pass, H; Endress, C; Cheung, E; Kalafer, M; Straznicka, M; Lim, M; Cecchi, G; Yoder, M; Connery, C; Koch, A
Objective: The International Early Lung Cancer Action Program (I-ELCAP) is a collaborative group designed to demonstrate reduction in lung cancer mortality by using low-dose computed tomography (CT) screening to identify early stage disease in high-risk individuals. While the majority of patients with stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were treated with surgical resection, some patients were treated with definitive radiation. This study explores the characteristics and outcomes of this population. Methods: Clinical stage I NSCLC patients in North America treated by radiotherapy or surgery alone were identified in the I-ELCAP database. All had undergone low-dose CT screening according to a common protocol from 1993 to 2009. Patient characteristics and lung cancer-specific Kaplan-Meier survival rates were compared. Results: From 32,521 baseline and 34,394 annual repeat screenings, 455 cases of clinical stage I NSCLC were identified. Only 12 of these patients (2.6 %) underwent definitive radiation with median follow-up of 5.3 years. These 12 patients when compared with the 376 patients treated by surgery alone were older (72 vs. 67 years, p = 0.01), had more pre-existing comorbidities (1.5 vs. 1.0, p = 0.005), but had no significant differences in male gender, pack-years of smoking, emphysema, or tumor size. The median radiation dose was 6,150 cGy. There was no difference in lung cancer-specific survival between surgery and radiation (92 vs. 90 %, p = 0.78). Conclusion: This is the first study to show outcomes of definitive radiation for stage I NSCLC in a screened population. Although only used in a small number of cases, there is no difference in lung cancer-specific survival when comparing definitive radiation to surgical resection. 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
EMBASE:2014401367
ISSN: 1948-7894
CID: 1069282

The challenging case conference: initial observations and feedback

Patel, Sohil Harshad; Ambrosino, Michael M; McGuinness, Georgeann
PMID: 22954551
ISSN: 1546-1440
CID: 178063

CT Scan Screening for Lung Cancer: Risk Factors for Nodules and Malignancy in a High-Risk Urban Cohort

Greenberg, Alissa K; Lu, Feng; Goldberg, Judith D; Eylers, Ellen; Tsay, Jun-Chieh; Yie, Ting-An; Naidich, David; McGuinness, Georgeann; Pass, Harvey; Tchou-Wong, Kam-Meng; Addrizzo-Harris, Doreen; Chachoua, Abraham; Crawford, Bernard; Rom, William N
BACKGROUND: Low-dose computed tomography (CT) for lung cancer screening can reduce lung cancer mortality. The National Lung Screening Trial reported a 20% reduction in lung cancer mortality in high-risk smokers. However, CT scanning is extremely sensitive and detects non-calcified nodules (NCNs) in 24-50% of subjects, suggesting an unacceptably high false-positive rate. We hypothesized that by reviewing demographic, clinical and nodule characteristics, we could identify risk factors associated with the presence of nodules on screening CT, and with the probability that a NCN was malignant. METHODS: We performed a longitudinal lung cancer biomarker discovery trial (NYU LCBC) that included low-dose CT-screening of high-risk individuals over 50 years of age, with more than 20 pack-year smoking histories, living in an urban setting, and with a potential for asbestos exposure. We used case-control studies to identify risk factors associated with the presence of nodules (n = 625) versus no nodules (n = 557), and lung cancer patients (n = 30) versus benign nodules (n = 128). RESULTS: The NYU LCBC followed 1182 study subjects prospectively over a 10-year period. We found 52% to have NCNs >4 mm on their baseline screen. Most of the nodules were stable, and 9.7% of solid and 26.2% of sub-solid nodules resolved. We diagnosed 30 lung cancers, 26 stage I. Three patients had synchronous primary lung cancers or multifocal disease. Thus, there were 33 lung cancers: 10 incident, and 23 prevalent. A sub-group of the prevalent group were stable for a prolonged period prior to diagnosis. These were all stage I at diagnosis and 12/13 were adenocarcinomas. CONCLUSIONS: NCNs are common among CT-screened high-risk subjects and can often be managed conservatively. Risk factors for malignancy included increasing age, size and number of nodules, reduced FEV1 and FVC, and increased pack-years smoking. A sub-group of screen-detected cancers are slow-growing and may contribute to over-diagnosis and lead-time biases.
PMCID:3388074
PMID: 22768300
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 171565

Computed tomographic screening for lung cancer: Individualising the benefit of the screening

Henschke C.I.; Yankelevitz D.F.; McCauley D.I.; Sone S.; Hanaoka T.; Markowitz S.; Miller A.; Klingler K.; Scherer T.; Inderbitzi R.; Zulueta J.; Montuenga L.; Bastarrika G.; Giunta S.; Crecco M.; Pugliese P.; Tockman M.; Shaham D.; Rice K.; Aye R.; Roberts H.; Patsios D.; Bauer T.; Lally J.; Austin J.H.M.; Pearson G.D.N.; Naidich D.; McGuinness G.; Rifkin M.; Fiore E.; Kopel S.; Klippenstein D.; Litwin A.; Loud P.A.; Kohman L.J.; Scalzetti E.M.; Khan A.; Shah R.; Smith M.V.; Williams H.T.; Lovett L.; Mendelson D.S.; Thurer R.; Heelan R.T.; Ginsberg M.S.; Sullivan F.; Ottinger M.; Vafai D.; Matalon T.A.S.; Odzer S.-L.; Liu X.; Sheppard B.; Cole E.; Wiernik P.H.; Ray D.; Pass H.; Endress C.; Mullen D.; Kalafer M.; Grannis F.; Rotter A.; Thorsen M.K.; Hansen R.; Camacho E.; Luedke D.
Individuals concerned about their risk of lung cancer are recommended to talk with their physicians about computed tomographic screening for lung cancer. To provide the necessary information, the survival benefit of the screening, specific to a particular person for a particular round of screening, is needed. The probability of survival gain from the first, baseline, round of screening was addressed as the product of: 1) the screening resulting in a diagnosis of lung cancer; 2) not dying from some other cause for a sufficiently long period of time; and 3) cure resulting from pre-symptomatic treatment of lung cancer. These probabilities were estimated using the International Early Lung Cancer Action Program data on individuals aged 40-85 yrs with a cigarette smoking history of 0-150 pack-yrs. The estimated probability of survival gain ranged from 0.4% for a 60-yr-old with a 10-pack-yr smoking history who quit smoking 20 yrs ago, to 3.1% for a 70-yr-old current smoker with a 100 pack-yr history and 2.0% for an 85-yr-old current smoker with a 150-pack-yr history. When seeking counsel about initiation of screening for lung cancer, an estimate of the probability of survival gain from the first round of computed tomographic screening, specific to the person's age and history of smoking, can be provided
EMBASE:2008061960
ISSN: 0903-1936
CID: 76019

Diffusional kurtosis imaging in the lung using hyperpolarized 3He

Trampel, Robert; Jensen, Jens H; Lee, Ray F; Kamenetskiy, Igor; McGuinness, Georgeann; Johnson, Glyn
Diseases of the small airspaces represent an increasingly important health problem. Asthma is primarily a disease of airway dysfunction, while chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with abnormalities in both the small airways and the alveoli. Conventional diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of hyperpolarized noble gases, because of the short T(2)* of the gas, is only capable of monitoring diffusion over short times and hence only short distances. Diffusion imaging is therefore only sensitive to changes in small structures of the lung (primarily the alveoli), and will not adequately interrogate diffusion along the longitudinal axes of bronchi and bronchioles. In this communication we present a new method, termed diffusional kurtosis imaging (DKI), that is particularly sensitive to diffusion over longer distances. DKI may therefore be more sensitive to abnormalities in the bronchioles and bronchi than conventional diffusion imaging. Preliminary DKI measurements on healthy human subjects and one patient with symptoms suggestive of small airway disease are presented. Although the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in the patient was similar to that in the normal controls, diffusional kurtosis was markedly reduced. This suggests that DKI measurements may be useful for assessing diseases of the small airways. Magn Reson Med, 2006. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc
PMID: 16958076
ISSN: 0740-3194
CID: 68278

The three and one-half year radiology residency [Editorial]

Grossman, Robert I; McGuinness, Georgeann
PMID: 17032842
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 70832

Advantages of parallel imaging in conjunction with hyperpolarized helium--a new approach to MRI of the lung

Lee, Ray F; Johnson, Glyn; Grossman, Robert I; Stoeckel, Bernd; Trampel, Robert; McGuinness, Georgeann
Hyperpolarized helium (3He) gas MRI has the potential to assess pulmonary function. The non-equilibrium state of hyperpolarized 3He results in the continual depletion of the signal level over the course of excitations. Under non-equilibrium conditions the relationship between the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the number of excitations significantly deviates from that established in the equilibrium state. In many circumstances the SNR increases or remains the same when the number of data acquisitions decreases. This provides a unique opportunity for performing parallel MRI in such a way that both the temporal and spatial resolution will increase without the conventional decrease in the SNR. In this study an analytical relationship between the SNR and the number of excitations for any flip angle was developed. Second, the point-spread function (PSF) was utilized to quantitatively demonstrate the unconventional SNR behavior for parallel imaging in hyperpolarized gas MRI. Third, a 24-channel (24ch) receive and two-channel (2ch) transmit phased-array system was developed to experimentally prove the theoretical predictions with 3He MRI. The in vivo experimental results prove that significant temporal resolution can be gained without the usual SNR loss in an equilibrium system, and that the entire lung can be scanned within one breath-hold (approximately 13 s) by applying parallel imaging to 3D data acquisition
PMID: 16586457
ISSN: 0740-3194
CID: 68279

Image Interpretation Session: 2004 [Meeting Abstract]

Drayer, BP; Bisset, GS; McGuinness, G; Brant-Zawadzki, MN; Fishman, EK; Major, NM
ISI:000236862500009
ISSN: 0271-5333
CID: 63808