| Literature DB >> 20162439 |
Stamatia Destounis1, Patricia Somerville, Philip Murphy, Posy Seifert.
Abstract
Problems associated with the large file sizes of digital mammograms have impeded the integration of digital mammography with picture archiving and communications systems. Digital mammograms irreversibly compressed by the novel wavelet Access Over Network (AON) compression algorithm were compared with lossless-compressed digital mammograms in a blinded reader study to evaluate the perceived sufficiency of irreversibly compressed images for comparison with next-year mammograms. Fifteen radiologists compared the same 100 digital mammograms in three different comparison modes: lossless-compressed vs 20:1 irreversibly compressed images (mode 1), lossless-compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed images (mode 2), and 20:1 irreversibly compressed images vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed images (mode 3). Compression levels were randomly assigned between monitors. For each mode, the less compressed of the two images was correctly identified no more frequently than would occur by chance if all images were identical in compression. Perceived sufficiency for comparison with next-year mammograms was achieved by 97.37% of the lossless-compressed images and 97.37% of the 20:1 irreversibly compressed images in mode 1, 97.67% of the lossless-compressed images and 97.67% of the 40:1 irreversibly compressed images in mode 2, and 99.33% of the 20:1 irreversibly compressed images and 99.19% of the 40:1 irreversibly compressed images in mode 3. In a random-effect analysis, the irreversibly compressed images were found to be noninferior to the lossless-compressed images. Digital mammograms irreversibly compressed by the wavelet AON compression algorithm were as frequently judged sufficient for comparison with next-year mammograms as lossless-compressed digital mammograms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 20162439 PMCID: PMC3025124 DOI: 10.1007/s10278-010-9277-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Digit Imaging ISSN: 0897-1889 Impact factor: 4.056
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of Digital Mammograms
| Characteristic |
|
|---|---|
| Age (year) | 58.0 ± 12.3 |
| Caucasian race (%) | 85 |
| Breast tissue composition (%) | |
| Almost entirely fat (0–25%) | 19 |
| Scattered fibroglandular densities (26–50%) | 30 |
| Heterogeneously dense (51–75%) | 44 |
| Extremely dense (76–100%) | 7 |
| Image acquisition site (%) | |
| Mayo Clinic | 67 |
| University of California at Los Angeles | 33 |
| Population (%) | |
| Screening | 49 |
| Diagnostic | 51 |
| BI-RADS category (%)a | |
| 1 | 9 |
| 2 | 6 |
| 3 | 10 |
| 4 | 48 |
| 5 | 27 |
| True clinical status (%) | |
| Cancerb | 50 |
| Noncancer | 50 |
| One main feature (%) | |
| Calcification only | 22 |
| Mass only | 39 |
| Mass with calcifications | 14 |
| Architectural distortion | 7 |
| Focal asymmetry | 12 |
| No identifiable finding | 6 |
BI-RADS Breast Imaging Reporting and Database System
aFinal BI-RADS assessment category was based on the official screen-film mammography report after consideration of special views and ultrasound, if acquired
bOf the cancers, 42% was from a screening population, and 58% of cancers were from a diagnostic population. Of the cancers, 50% was BI-RADS category 4, and 50% were BI-RADS category 5
Distribution of Image Types by Breast, View, and Cancer Status
| Breast, view, and status | Reliability subset (read twice) | Reader review |
|---|---|---|
| RCC cancer | 4 | 8 |
| RCC noncancer | 3 | 12 |
| RMLO cancer | 1 | 11 |
| RMLO noncancer | 3 | 10 |
| LCC cancer | 2 | 11 |
| LCC noncancer | 1 | 9 |
| LMLO cancer | 2 | 11 |
| LMLO noncancer | 4 | 8 |
RCC right craniocaudal, RMLO right mediolateral oblique, LCC left craniocaudal, LMLO left mediolateral oblique
Order Sequence of Comparison Images for Display
| Breast and mode | Left monitor | Right monitor |
|---|---|---|
| RCC or RMLO | ||
| Mode 1 | 20:1 irreversibly compressed | Lossless-compressed |
| Mode 2 | Lossless-compressed | 40:1 irreversibly compressed |
| Mode 3 | 40:1 irreversibly compressed | 20:1 irreversibly compressed |
| LCC or LMLO | ||
| Mode 1 | Lossless-compressed | 20:1 irreversibly compressed |
| Mode 2 | 40:1 irreversibly compressed | Lossless-compressed |
| Mode 3 | 20:1 irreversibly compressed | 40:1 irreversibly compressed |
RCC right craniocaudal, RMLO right mediolateral oblique, LCC left craniocaudal, LMLO left mediolateral oblique
Average Proportion of Images Perceived to be of Sufficient Quality for Comparison with Next-Year Mammograms
| Comparison mode | Relative compression level | Perceived sufficient for comparison with next-year mammograms |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Lossless-compressed vs 20:1 irreversibly compressed | Less compressed | 97.37% (98.33% CI, 91.37–100%a) |
| More compressed | 97.37% (98.33% CI, 91.37–100%a) | |
| 2. Lossless-compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | Less compressed | 97.67% (98.33% CI, 92.41–100%a) |
| More compressed | 97.67% (98.33% CI, 92.41–100%a) | |
| 3. 20:1 irreversibly compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | Less compressed | 99.33% (98.33% CI, 98.12–100%a) |
| More compressed | 99.19% (98.33% CI, 97.92–100%a) |
CI confidence interval
aThe upper limit of the confidence interval was truncated at the boundary value of 100%
Random-Effect Analysis of Differences in Average Proportions
| Comparison mode | Difference in average proportions | SE | Lower limit of 98.33% confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Lossless-compressed vs 20:1 irreversibly compressed | 0.00% | 0.00%a | 0.00% |
| 2. Lossless-compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | 0.00% | 0.10% | −0.23% |
| 3. 20:1 irreversibly compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | 0.13% | 0.09% | −0.35% |
SE standard error
aThe standard error is 0.00% because for each reader, whenever one image was perceived to be of sufficient quality for comparison with next-year mammograms, the other image was also perceived to be of sufficient quality for comparison with next-year mammograms, that is, there was no discordance in the ratings
Average Proportion of Image Pairings with Less Compressed Image Correctly Identified
| Comparison mode | Less compressed image was correctly identified |
|---|---|
| 1. Lossless-compressed vs 20:1 irreversibly compressed | 17.31% (98.33% CI, 4.32–30.31%) |
| 2. Lossless-compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | 18.01% (98.33% CI, 5.66–30.36%) |
| 3. 20:1 irreversibly compressed vs 40:1 irreversibly compressed | 16.22% (98.33% CI, 5.20–27.24%) |
CI confidence interval
Perceived Relative Quality of More Compressed Images
| Characteristic | Per-reader average proportion of image pairings in which the more compressed image was rated as at least similar |
|---|---|
| Display of object in identified area of interest | |
| 1. Lossless vs 20:1 | 93.91% (98.33% CI, 86.94–100.0%a) |
| 2. Lossless vs 40:1 | 90.49% (98.33% CI, 81.79–99.20%) |
| 3. 20:1 vs 40:1 | 93.46% (98.33% CI, 86.03–100.0%a) |
| Display of the area at or near the skin line | |
| 1. Lossless vs 20:1 | 98.44% (98.33% CI, 96.45–100.0%a) |
| 2. Lossless vs 40:1 | 95.50% (98.33% CI, 90.24–100.0%a) |
| 3. 20:1 vs 40:1 | 95.85% (98.33% CI, 90.07–100.0%a) |
| Display of the area at or near the chest wall | |
| 1. Lossless vs 20:1 | 98.38% (98.33% CI, 96.45–100.0%a) |
| 2. Lossless vs 40:1 | 97.49% (98.33% CI, 93.39–100.0%a) |
| 3. 20:1 vs 40:1 | 97.71% (98.33% CI, 94.09–100.0%a) |
CI confidence interval
aThe upper limit of the confidence interval was truncated at the boundary value of 100%
Intrareader Reliability for Perceived Sufficiency of Images
| Comparison mode | κ not defined | κ = 1 | κ < 1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Lossless vs 20:1 | |||
| More compressed | 86.67% | 6.67% | 6.67% |
| Less compressed | 86.67% | 6.67% | 6.67% |
| 2. Lossless vs 40:1 | |||
| More compressed | 86.67% | 0.0% | 13.33% |
| Less compressed | 86.67% | 0.0% | 13.33% |
| 3. 20:1 vs 40:1 | |||
| More compressed | 86.67% | 6.67% | 6.67% |
| Less compressed | 86.67% | 6.67% | 6.67% |
p o = observed proportion of agreement, p e = expected proportion of agreement