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Area of ischemia assessed by physicians and software packages from myocardial perfusion scintigrams

Authors :
Allan Johansen
Lars Edenbrandt
Karin Nyström
Karl Sjöstrand
Oliver Lindner
Lena Johansson
Peter Höglund
Philip Hasbak
Eva Olsson
Milan Lomsky
Elin Trägårdh
Shinro Matsuo
Kenichi Nakajima
Hiroshi Wakabayashi
Sven-Eric Svensson
A. Kammeier
Sophia Frantz
Source :
Edenbrandt, L, Hoglund, P, Frantz, S, Hasbak, P, Johansen, A, Johansson, L, Kammeier, A, Lindner, O, Lomsky, M, Matsuo, S, Nakajima, K, Nystrom, K, Olsson, E, Sjostrand, K, Svensson, S E, Wakabayashi, H & Tragardh, E 2014, ' Area of ischemia assessed by physicians and software packages from myocardial perfusion scintigrams ', B M C Medical Imaging, vol. 14, 5 . https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2342-14-5, BMC Medical Imaging; 14(1), no 5 (2014), BMC Medical Imaging
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

Background The European Society of Cardiology recommends that patients with >10% area of ischemia should receive revascularization. We investigated inter-observer variability for the extent of ischemic defects reported by different physicians and by different software tools, and if inter-observer variability was reduced when the physicians were provided with a computerized suggestion of the defects. Methods Twenty-five myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) patients who were regarded as ischemic according to the final report were included. Eleven physicians in nuclear medicine delineated the extent of the ischemic defects. After at least two weeks, they delineated the defects again, and were this time provided a suggestion of the defect delineation by EXINI HeartTM (EXINI). Summed difference scores and ischemic extent values were obtained from four software programs. Results The median extent values obtained from the 11 physicians varied between 8% and 34%, and between 9% and 16% for the software programs. For all 25 patients, mean extent obtained from EXINI was 17.0% (± standard deviation (SD) 14.6%). Mean extent for physicians was 22.6% (± 15.6%) for the first delineation and 19.1% (± 14.9%) for the evaluation where they were provided computerized suggestion. Intra-class correlation (ICC) increased from 0.56 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.41-0.72) to 0.81 (95% CI 0.71-0.90) between the first and the second delineation, and SD between physicians were 7.8 (first) and 5.9 (second delineation). Conclusions There was large variability in the estimated ischemic defect size obtained both from different physicians and from different software packages. When the physicians were provided with a suggested delineation, the inter-observer variability decreased significantly.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712342
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Medical Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3dbea4a140e4b7c0eabd43bb32995a4a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2342-14-5