Computer-aided analysis of 64- and 320-slice coronary computed tomography angiography: a comparison with expert human interpretation |
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Authors: | Moshrik Abd alamir,Pamela Noack,Kristine H. Jang,Jhanna A. Moore,Roman Goldberg,Michael Poon |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Radiology,Stony Brook Medicine,Stony Brook,USA;2.Department of Cardiology,Advocate Lutheran General Hospital,Park Ridge,USA;3.Department of Technology in Society,Stony Brook University School of Engineering,Stony Brook,USA;4.Department of Cardiology, Lenox Hill Hospital,Northwell Health,New York,USA;5.Department of Cardiology,Cooper University,Camden,USA;6.Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Elmhurst,USA;7.RCADIA Medical Solutions,Wellsley,USA;8.Department of Emergency Medicine,Stony Brook Medicine,Stony Brook,USA;9.Department of Cardiology,Stony Brook Medicine,Stony Brook,USA;10.Department of Cardiology, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine,Hofstra University,East Garden City,USA;11.Department of Radiology, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine,Hofstra University,East Garden City,USA;12.Department of Emergency Medicine, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine,Hofstra University,East Garden City,USA |
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Abstract: | Routine use of CCTA to triage Emergency Department (ED) chest pain can reduce ED length of stay while providing accurate diagnoses. We evaluated the effectiveness of using Computer Aided Diagnosis in the triage of low to intermediate risk emergency chest pain patients with Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography (CCTA). Using 64 and 320 slice CT scanners, we compared the diagnostic capability of computer aided diagnosis to human readers in 923 ED patients with chest pain. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, Positive Predictive Value and Negative Predictive Value for cases performed on each scanner. We calculated the area under the Receiver Operator Curve (ROC) comparing results for the two scanners to Computer Aided Diagnosis performance as compared to the human reader. We examined index and 30 Day outcomes by diagnosis for each scanner and the human reader. 60% of cases could be triaged by the computer. Sensitivity was approximately 85% for both scanners, with specificity at 50.6% for the 64 slice and at 56.5% for the 320 slice scanner (per person measures). The NPV was 97.8 and 97.1 for the 64 and 320 slice scanners, respectively. Results for the four major vessels were similar with negative predictive values ranging from 97 to 100%. The ROC for Computer Aided Diagnosis for the 64 and 320 Slice Scanners, using the human reader as the gold standard was 0.6794 and 0.7097 respectively. The index and 30 day outcomes were consistent for the human reader and Computer Aided Diagnosis interpretation. Although Computer Aided Diagnosis with CCTA cannot serve completely as a substitute for human reading, it offers excellent potential as a triage tool in busy EDs. |
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