| Literature DB >> 18423031 |
Klaus Kayser1, Jürgen Görtler, Torsten Goldmann, Ekkehard Vollmer, Peter Hufnagl, Gian Kayser.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Progress in automated image analysis, virtual microscopy, hospital information systems, and interdisciplinary data exchange require image standards to be applied in tissue-based diagnosis. AIMS: To describe the theoretical background, practical experiences and comparable solutions in other medical fields to promote image standards applicable for diagnostic pathology. THEORY AND EXPERIENCES: Images used in tissue-based diagnosis present with pathology-specific characteristics. It seems appropriate to discuss their characteristics and potential standardization in relation to the levels of hierarchy in which they appear. All levels can be divided into legal, medical, and technological properties. Standards applied to the first level include regulations or aims to be fulfilled. In legal properties, they have to regulate features of privacy, image documentation, transmission, and presentation; in medical properties, features of disease-image combination, human-diagnostics, automated information extraction, archive retrieval and access; and in technological properties features of image acquisition, display, formats, transfer speed, safety, and system dynamics. The next lower second level has to implement the prescriptions of the upper one, i.e. describe how they are implemented. Legal aspects should demand secure encryption for privacy of all patient related data, image archives that include all images used for diagnostics for a period of 10 years at minimum, accurate annotations of dates and viewing, and precise hardware and software information. Medical aspects should demand standardized patients' files such as DICOM 3 or HL 7 including history and previous examinations, information of image display hardware and software, of image resolution and fields of view, of relation between sizes of biological objects and image sizes, and of access to archives and retrieval. Technological aspects should deal with image acquisition systems (resolution, colour temperature, focus, brightness, and quality evaluation procedures), display resolution data, implemented image formats, storage, cycle frequency, backup procedures, operation system, and external system accessibility. The lowest third level describes the permitted limits and threshold in detail. At present, an applicable standard including all mentioned features does not exist to our knowledge; some aspects can be taken from radiological standards (PACS, DICOM 3); others require specific solutions or are not covered yet.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18423031 PMCID: PMC2362107 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-3-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Proposed levels of standards in tissue-based diagnosis
| privacy, image documentation, transmission, presentation | disease – image combination, human, automated diagnosis, archive | Image display, formats, transfer speed, safety, system dynamics | |
| encryption of privacy data, 10 years image archives, annotations of dates and viewing, precise hardware and software information | DICOM 3, HL 7, image resolution, fields of view, of sizes of biological objects and image access to archives and retrieval | PACS, image acquisition systems, image correction procedures, display resolution, image formats, storage, cycle frequency, backup procedures, operation system, external system accessibility | |
| Maximum error rate, individual prepositions, institutional characteristics. | Diagnosis frequencies, dates of continuous education, quality control. | Control check of devices and used systems, device and software maintenance. |
A survey of medical standards (level 2 and level 3) suggested or already implemented in tissue-based diagnosis
| Disease order [41] | Hierarchic, 1 – 10 | Proposed |
| Formal disease classification | ICD-O, SNO-MED | Accepted |
| Disease/human classification | Board discussion | Accepted for tumours (WHO classification) |
| Disease frequency | Not evaluated, probably >2 per month | Open |
| Mandatory expert consultation | Rare cancer, lymphoma | Proposed |
| Mandatory quality assurance | Breast cancer, Hodgkin's disease | Accepted |
| Image handling, exchange by DICOM 3, HL 7 | General & individual regulations | Proposed |
| HIS, RIS communication by DICOM 3, HL 7 | General & individual regulations | Proposed |
| Expert communication guidelines | 4 – 8 images/case, <2 different magnifications/case, | Proposed |
| Diagnosis/image properties | >50 pixels/object, >40 objects/image, >256 × 256 image size | Proposed |
| Disease/image features | Disease – associated texture, object, structure parameters | Open |
| Image quality measure | Gray value deviation, image standardization (shading, gray value range, gradient) | Open |
| Screening/image size | Texture features: crude screening Object/structure features: classical diagnosis (H&E) | Open |
| Diagnosis/colour space | RGB space – classical diagnosis. HSI space – prognosis associated diagnosis, cancer scores (hormone receptor, Gleason, etc.) | Open |
Proposed error grading of potential medical differences between primary and expert diagnosis (according to [41].
| 0 | ||
| 1 | Normal <> Abnormal | |
| 2 | Inflammatory <> Neoplastic | |
| 3 | Acute <> Chronic; Benign <> Malignant | |
| 4 | Sarcoma <> Carcinoma, Tumor <> Inflammation; Non- <> Invasive | |
| 5 | Tbc; Fibroma <> Myoma; Adeno <> Squamous | |
| 6 | low <> high | |
| 7 | Tbc <> Brucellosis; Primary <> Metastasis | |
| 8 | Good <> Fair <> Poor | |
| 9 | No need <> yes | |
| 10 |