Takashi Terasawa1, Takatoshi Aoki2, Seiichi Murakami1,3, Hyoungseop Kim3, Masami Fujii1, Michiko Kobayashi1, Chihiro Chihara1, Yoshiko Hayashida1, Yukunori Korogi1. 1. Department of Radiology, University of Occupational and Environmental Health School of Medicine, 1-1 Iseigaoka, Kitakyushu, Yahatanishi-ku, 807-8555, Japan. 2. Department of Radiology, University of Occupational and Environmental Health School of Medicine, 1-1 Iseigaoka, Kitakyushu, Yahatanishi-ku, 807-8555, Japan. a-taka@med.uoeh-u.ac.jp. 3. Graduate School of Engineering, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Fukuoka, Japan.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the usefulness of the CT temporal subtraction (TS) method for the detection of the lung cancer with predominant ground-glass opacity (LC-pGGO). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-five pairs of CT and their TS images in patients with LC-pGGO (31 lesions) and 25 pairs of those in patients without nodules were used for an observer performance study. Eight radiologists participated and the statistical significance of differences with and without the CT-TS was assessed by JAFROC analysis. RESULTS: The average figure-of-merit (FOM) values for all radiologists increased to a statistically significant degree, from 0.861 without CT-TS to 0.912 with CT-TS (p < .001). The average sensitivity for detecting the actionable lesions improved from 73.4 % to 85.9 % using CT-TS. The reading time with CT-TS was not significantly different from that without. CONCLUSION: The use of CT-TS improves the observer performance for the detection of LC-pGGO. KEY POINTS: • CT temporal subtraction can improve the detection accuracy of lung cancer. • Reading time with temporal subtraction is not different from that without. • CT temporal subtraction improves observer performance for ground-glass/subsolid nodule detection.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the usefulness of the CT temporal subtraction (TS) method for the detection of the lung cancer with predominant ground-glass opacity (LC-pGGO). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-five pairs of CT and their TS images in patients with LC-pGGO (31 lesions) and 25 pairs of those in patients without nodules were used for an observer performance study. Eight radiologists participated and the statistical significance of differences with and without the CT-TS was assessed by JAFROC analysis. RESULTS: The average figure-of-merit (FOM) values for all radiologists increased to a statistically significant degree, from 0.861 without CT-TS to 0.912 with CT-TS (p < .001). The average sensitivity for detecting the actionable lesions improved from 73.4 % to 85.9 % using CT-TS. The reading time with CT-TS was not significantly different from that without. CONCLUSION: The use of CT-TS improves the observer performance for the detection of LC-pGGO. KEY POINTS: • CT temporal subtraction can improve the detection accuracy of lung cancer. • Reading time with temporal subtraction is not different from that without. • CT temporal subtraction improves observer performance for ground-glass/subsolid nodule detection.
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