| Literature DB >> 30066248 |
Sarah J van Riel1, Colin Jacobs2, Ernst Th Scholten1, Rianne Wittenberg3, Mathilde M Winkler Wille4, Bartjan de Hoop5, Ralf Sprengers3, Onno M Mets6,7, Bram Geurts1, Mathias Prokop1, Cornelia Schaefer-Prokop1,8, Bram van Ginneken1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Lung-RADS represents a categorical system published by the American College of Radiology to standardise management in lung cancer screening. The purpose of the study was to quantify how well readers agree in assigning Lung-RADS categories to screening CTs; secondary goals were to assess causes of disagreement and evaluate its impact on patient management.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer screening; Lung cancer; Observer variation; Solitary pulmonary nodule; X-ray computed tomography
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30066248 PMCID: PMC6302878 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-018-5599-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Lung-RADS assessment category criteria
| Lung-RADS category | Criteria for baseline CT scans | Criteria for follow-up CT scans | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | No nodules, or nodules with complete, central, popcorn or concentric rings of calcification, fat-containing nodules | No nodules, or nodules with complete, central, popcorn or concentric rings of calcification, fat-containing nodules | Annual LDCT screening |
| 2 | SN < 6 mm | SN and PSN < 6 mm | Annual LDCT screening |
| 3 | SN ≥ 6 and <8 mm | SN new ≥ 4 and < 6 mm | 6 month LDCT |
| 4A | SN ≥ 8 and < 15 mm | SN growing < 8 mm or new ≥ 6 and < 8 mm | 3 month LDCT; PET/CT |
| 4B | SN ≥ 15 mm | SN new or growing and ≥ 8 mm | Chest CT with/without contrast, PET/CT and/or tissue sampling |
SN solid nodule, PSN part-solid nodule, GGN pure ground-glass nodule
Fig. 1Two examples of risk-dominant nodules characterised differently by the seven observers which led to Lung-RADS classification differences. Each example shows a nodule displayed in magnified view (left column, field of view of 60 × 60 mm) and normal view (right column). The three different rows show axial (top), coronal (middle) and sagittal (bottom) plane. a T1 CT scan with a nodule that was classified as Lung-RADS 2 by one observer (new small solid nodule), Lung-RADS 4A by one observer (new part-solid with solid component < 4 mm) and Lung-RADS 4B by five observers (new part-solid, with solid component > 4 mm). b T1 CT scan with a nodule that was classified as Lung-RADS category 4A or 4B by five observers (new solid nodule with a measured diameter ranging from 7 to 9.6 mm) and Lung-RADS category 4B by two observers (new part-solid nodule with a solid component > 4.0 mm)
Factors of disagreement in Lung-RADS category assessment on observer basis
| Cause of observer disagreement | Number |
|---|---|
| Same risk-dominant nodule | 250 (26%) |
| Interpretation: different nodule type | 37 (15%) |
| Interpretation: nodule diameter measurement | 207 (83%) |
| Interpretation: nodule growth | 6 (2%) |
| Different risk-dominant nodule | 721 (74%) |
| Total | 971 (100%) |
Fig. 2One example of a risk-dominant nodule characterised differently by the observers which led to Lung-RADS classification differences with impact on subject management within one observer pair. Each example shows a nodule displayed in magnified view (left column, field of view of 60 × 60 mm) and normal view (right column). The three different rows show axial (top), coronal (middle) and sagittal (bottom) plane. This was a benign nodule detected on a T0 scan and was classified as Lung-RADS 4A by one observer (solid nodule with a measured diameter of 9 mm), Lung-RADS 3 by five observers (solid nodule with measured diameters of 6 or 7 mm) and Lung-RADS 2 by one observer (solid nodule with a measured diameter of 5 mm)