| Literature DB >> 29619278 |
David Clunie1, Dan Hosseinzadeh2, Mikael Wintell3, David De Mena4, Nieves Lajara5, Marcial Garcia-Rojo4, Gloria Bueno5, Kiran Saligrama6, Aaron Stearrett6, David Toomey6, Esther Abels7, Frank Van Apeldoorn7, Stephane Langevin2, Sean Nichols2, Joachim Schmid8, Uwe Horchner8, Bruce Beckwith9, Anil Parwani10, Liron Pantanowitz11.
Abstract
As digital pathology systems for clinical diagnostic work applications become mainstream, interoperability between these systems from different vendors becomes critical. For the first time, multiple digital pathology vendors have publicly revealed the use of the digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM) standard file format and network protocol to communicate between separate whole slide acquisition, storage, and viewing components. Note the use of DICOM for clinical diagnostic applications is still to be validated in the United States. The successful demonstration shows that the DICOM standard is fundamentally sound, though many lessons were learned. These lessons will be incorporated as incremental improvements in the standard, provide more detailed profiles to constrain variation for specific use cases, and offer educational material for implementers. Future Connectathon events will expand the scope to include more devices and vendors, as well as more ambitious use cases including laboratory information system integration and annotation for image analysis, as well as more geographic diversity. Users should request DICOM features in all purchases and contracts. It is anticipated that the growth of DICOM-compliant manufacturers will likely also ease DICOM for pathology becoming a recognized standard and as such the regulatory pathway for digital pathology products.Entities:
Keywords: Connectivity; digital imaging and communications in medicine; digital imaging and communications in medicine supplement 145; digital imaging and communications in medicine web; digital pathology; interoperability; picture archiving and communication system; virtual microscopy; whole slide imaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 29619278 PMCID: PMC5869966 DOI: 10.4103/jpi.jpi_1_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol Inform
Figure 1Dan Hosseinzadeh, co-chair of the digital imaging and communications in medicine pathology working group, presenting at the 2017 pathology visions conference