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Journal Article

Citation

Higashigaito K, Fischer G, Jungblut L, Blüthgen C, Schwyzer M, Eberhard M, Dos Santos DP, Baessler B, Vuylsteke P, Soons JAM, Frauenfelder T. Eur. Radiol. 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00330-021-08473-w

PMID

35020010

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To compare the accuracy of lesion detection of trauma-related injuries using combined "all-in-one" fused (AIO) and conventionally reconstructed images (CR) in acute trauma CT.

METHODS: In this retrospective study, trauma CT of 66 patients (median age 47 years, range 18-96 years; 20 female (30.3%)) were read using AIO and CR. Images were independently reviewed by 4 blinded radiologists (two residents and two consultants) for trauma-related injuries in 22 regions. Sub-analyses were performed to analyze the influence of experience (residents vs. consultants) and body region (chest, abdomen, skeletal structures) on lesion detection. Paired t-test was used to compare the accuracy of lesion detection. The effect size was calculated (Cohen's d). Linear mixed-effects model with patients as the fixed effect and random forest models were used to investigate the effect of experience, reconstruction/image processing, and body region on lesion detection.

RESULTS: Reading time of residents was significantly faster using AIO (AIO: 266 ± 72 s, CR: 318 ± 113 s; p < 0.001; d = 0.46) while no significant difference was observed in the accuracy of lesion detection (AIO: 93.5 ± 6.0%, CR: 94.6 ± 6.0% p = 0.092; d =  - 0.21). Reading time of consultants showed no significant difference (AIO: 283 ± 82 s, CR: 274 ± 95 s; p = 0.067; d = 0.16). Accuracy was significantly higher using CR; however, the difference and effect size were very small (AIO 95.1 ± 4.9%, CR: 97.3 ± 3.7%, p = 0.002; d =  - 0.39). The linear mixed-effects model showed only minor effect of image processing/reconstruction for lesion detection.

CONCLUSIONS: Residents at the emergency department might benefit from faster reading time without sacrificing lesion detection rate using AIO for trauma CT. KEY POINTS: • Image fusion techniques decrease the reading time of acute trauma CT without sacrificing diagnostic accuracy.


Language: en

Keywords

Emergency service, hospital; Image processing, computer-assisted; Retrospective studies; Tomography, X-ray computed

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