CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation

CT colonography is now widely regarded as the optimal radiological technique for colonic examination. However, performance characteristics, particularly relating to interpretation accuracy, interpretation times and polyp measurement have been derived primarily from academic centres in the USA. For s...

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Main Author: Burling, David
Other Authors: Halligan, Steve
Published: University of Leicester 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439390
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4393902015-03-19T04:20:23ZCT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretationBurling, DavidHalligan, Steve2006CT colonography is now widely regarded as the optimal radiological technique for colonic examination. However, performance characteristics, particularly relating to interpretation accuracy, interpretation times and polyp measurement have been derived primarily from academic centres in the USA. For successful implementation of CT colonography, such performance characteristics must be generalisable to non-academic centres, different patient populations in different geographical locations, and different clinical environments. This thesis aims to investigate current UK implementation and to determine the interpretative performance of observers across the UK and Europe, focussing on those interventions influencing reader accuracy and polyp measurement. The first chapter reviews the technique, diagnostic performance and clinical role of CT colonography. It is followed by two surveys revealing CT colonography is widely available across the UK NHS, and that hitherto unsuspected complications do occur, although CT colonography appears relatively safe in routine clinical practice when compared to alternatives. The effect of directed training on reader performance is investigated in a multi-centre European study and shows that experienced radiologists are significantly more accurate and time-efficient when reporting CT colonography compared to specifically trained but less experienced radiologists and radiographers. A subsequent study also shows they are more accurate than radiologists offering CT colonography in UK clinical practice routinely. Trained radiographers can perform as well as their radiologist counterparts. The accuracy of polyp measurement is investigated and the effect of different visualisation displays determined. Results suggest that an optimised 2D display utilising a 'colon CT window' should be recommended. Finally, we show that an automatic measurement software tool improves inter and intra-observer agreement for polyp measurement 'in vitro' although the benefit for in-vivo measurement is less clear.616.342075722University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439390http://hdl.handle.net/2381/9380Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 616.342075722
spellingShingle 616.342075722
Burling, David
CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
description CT colonography is now widely regarded as the optimal radiological technique for colonic examination. However, performance characteristics, particularly relating to interpretation accuracy, interpretation times and polyp measurement have been derived primarily from academic centres in the USA. For successful implementation of CT colonography, such performance characteristics must be generalisable to non-academic centres, different patient populations in different geographical locations, and different clinical environments. This thesis aims to investigate current UK implementation and to determine the interpretative performance of observers across the UK and Europe, focussing on those interventions influencing reader accuracy and polyp measurement. The first chapter reviews the technique, diagnostic performance and clinical role of CT colonography. It is followed by two surveys revealing CT colonography is widely available across the UK NHS, and that hitherto unsuspected complications do occur, although CT colonography appears relatively safe in routine clinical practice when compared to alternatives. The effect of directed training on reader performance is investigated in a multi-centre European study and shows that experienced radiologists are significantly more accurate and time-efficient when reporting CT colonography compared to specifically trained but less experienced radiologists and radiographers. A subsequent study also shows they are more accurate than radiologists offering CT colonography in UK clinical practice routinely. Trained radiographers can perform as well as their radiologist counterparts. The accuracy of polyp measurement is investigated and the effect of different visualisation displays determined. Results suggest that an optimised 2D display utilising a 'colon CT window' should be recommended. Finally, we show that an automatic measurement software tool improves inter and intra-observer agreement for polyp measurement 'in vitro' although the benefit for in-vivo measurement is less clear.
author2 Halligan, Steve
author_facet Halligan, Steve
Burling, David
author Burling, David
author_sort Burling, David
title CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
title_short CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
title_full CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
title_fullStr CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
title_full_unstemmed CT colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
title_sort ct colonography : defining performance and interventions to improve interpretation
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2006
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439390
work_keys_str_mv AT burlingdavid ctcolonographydefiningperformanceandinterventionstoimproveinterpretation
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