I. C Chibuzo, A. Smart, A. Takure, B. Osobu, J. Rimande, G. Ogbole
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Methods: An assessment tool (”LFMRI”) was developed, based on PIRADS criteria, to evaluate prostate MRI reports of images generated from a LFMRI. Two independent observers (urologist and radiologist) rated the reports. Another general radiologist used the tool to generate new reports from the same images. These reports were reassessed by the same raters. The average assigned scores were categorized as poor (0–4), fair (5–8), or good (9–12). Results: Six of seven (85.7%) reviewed reports were poor with only one (14.7%) providing useful information for clinical decision. Inter-rater reliability was moderate (48.3%). The revised reports revealed additional clinically useful information in all cases and a mean total score improvement of 7.3 (0.69). Inter-rater reliability improved to 78.7%95% confidence interval, CI (0.5, 1.0), P < 0.0001. Conclusion: The images generated from LFMRI in resource-constrained settings may provide requisite information for PCa evaluation. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:由于基础设施和财政限制,低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的公共机构使用低场磁共振成像(LFMRI)系统,这限制了全球指南一致性的可能性。尽管如此,现有的系统正在被用于扩大前列腺癌(PCa)成像评估和疾病表征的范围。由于中低收入国家缺乏亚专科放射科医生,普通放射科医生将需要更多的接触,以满足亚专科日益增长的需求,符合普遍的最佳实践,并改善临床结果。目的:本研究的目的是评估三级医院普通放射科医生在LFMRI (<0.5T)系统上生成的用于PCa评估的MRI报告。方法:基于PIRADS标准,开发了一种评估工具(“LFMRI”)来评估LFMRI生成的图像的前列腺MRI报告。两名独立观察员(泌尿科医生和放射科医生)对报告进行了评级。另一位普通放射科医生使用该工具从相同的图像生成新的报告。这些报告由相同的评级人员重新评估。平均评分分为差(0-4分)、一般(5-8分)、好(9-12分)。结果:7份报告中有6份(85.7%)质量较差,仅有1份(14.7%)为临床决策提供了有用的信息。评估者间信度中等(48.3%)。修订后的报告在所有病例中显示了额外的临床有用信息,平均总分提高了7.3分(0.69分)。评分间信度提高至78.7%,95%置信区间,CI (0.5, 1.0), P < 0.0001。结论:在资源受限的情况下,LFMRI生成的图像可以为PCa评估提供必要的信息。一个简单的工具(LFMRI)可以指导普通放射科医生根据LFMRI报告做出有用和增强的临床决策。
Improving the specificity of uniparametric low-field magnetic resonance imaging in prostate cancer assessment in resource-limited settings
Background: Due to infrastructural and financial constraints, public institutions in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) use low-field magnetic resonance imaging (LFMRI) systems, which limits the possibility for global guideline conformity. Nonetheless, existing systems are being used to broaden the scope of prostate cancer (PCa) imaging assessment and disease characterization. Because LMICs have a dearth of subspecialty radiologists, general radiologists would need more exposure to meet the growing needs of the subspecialties, conform to universal best practice, and improve clinical outcomes. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate MRI reports for PCa evaluation generated by general radiologists at a tertiary hospital on a LFMRI (<0.5T) system. Methods: An assessment tool (”LFMRI”) was developed, based on PIRADS criteria, to evaluate prostate MRI reports of images generated from a LFMRI. Two independent observers (urologist and radiologist) rated the reports. Another general radiologist used the tool to generate new reports from the same images. These reports were reassessed by the same raters. The average assigned scores were categorized as poor (0–4), fair (5–8), or good (9–12). Results: Six of seven (85.7%) reviewed reports were poor with only one (14.7%) providing useful information for clinical decision. Inter-rater reliability was moderate (48.3%). The revised reports revealed additional clinically useful information in all cases and a mean total score improvement of 7.3 (0.69). Inter-rater reliability improved to 78.7%95% confidence interval, CI (0.5, 1.0), P < 0.0001. Conclusion: The images generated from LFMRI in resource-constrained settings may provide requisite information for PCa evaluation. A simple tool (LFMRI) can guide general radiologists in making useful and enhanced clinical decisions based on LFMRI reports.