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Detection of emergent large vessel occlusion stroke with CT angiography is high across all levels of radiology training and grayscale viewing methods.

Authors :
Boyd CA
Jayaraman MV
Baird GL
Einhorn WS
Stib MT
Atalay MK
Boxerman JL
Lourenco AP
Jindal G
Hidlay DT
DiBiasio EL
McTaggart RA
Source :
European radiology [Eur Radiol] 2020 Aug; Vol. 30 (8), pp. 4447-4453. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Mar 31.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objectives: CT angiography (CTA) is essential in acute stroke to detect emergent large vessel occlusions (ELVO) and must be interpreted by radiologists with and without subspecialized training. Additionally, grayscale inversion has been suggested to improve diagnostic accuracy in other radiology applications. This study examines diagnostic performance in ELVO detection between neuroradiologists, non-neuroradiologists, and radiology residents using standard and grayscale inversion viewing methods.<br />Methods: A random, counterbalanced experimental design was used, where 18 radiologists with varying experiences interpreted the same patient images with and without grayscale inversion. Confirmed positive and negative ELVO cases were randomly ordered using a balanced design. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values as well as confidence, subjective assessment of image quality, time to ELVO detection, and overall interpretation time were examined between grayscale inversion (on/off) by experience level using generalized mixed modeling assuming a binary, negative binomial, and binomial distributions, respectively.<br />Results: All groups of radiologists had high sensitivity and specificity for ELVO detection (all > .94). Neuroradiologists were faster than non-neuroradiologists and residents in interpretation time, with a mean of 47 s to detect ELVO, as compared with 59 and 74 s, respectively. Residents were subjectively less confident than attending physicians. With respect to grayscale inversion, no differences were observed between groups with grayscale inversion vs. standard viewing for diagnostic performance (p = 0.30), detection time (p = .45), overall interpretation time (p = .97), and confidence (p = .20).<br />Conclusions: Diagnostic performance in ELVO detection with CTA was high across all levels of radiologist training level. Grayscale inversion offered no significant detection advantage.<br />Key Points: • Stroke is an acute vascular syndrome that requires acute vascular imaging. • Proximal large vessel occlusions can be identified quickly and accurately by radiologists across all training levels. • Grayscale inversion demonstrated minimal detectable benefit in the detection of proximal large vessel occlusions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-1084
Volume :
30
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32232790
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-020-06814-9