| Literature DB >> 34379679 |
Thomas J Marini1, Daniel C Oppenheimer1, Timothy M Baran1, Deborah J Rubens1, Ann Dozier2, Brian Garra3, Miguel S Egoavil4, Rosemary A Quinn1, Jonah Kan1, Rafael L Ortega1, Yu T Zhao1, Lorena Tamayo4, Claudia Carlotto4, Benjamin Castaneda5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatic and biliary diseases are prevalent worldwide, but the majority of people lack access to diagnostic medical imaging for their assessment. The liver and gallbladder are readily amenable to sonographic examination, and ultrasound is a portable, cost-effective imaging modality suitable for use in rural and underserved areas. However, the deployment of ultrasound in these settings is limited by the lack of experienced sonographers to perform the exam. In this study, we tested an asynchronous telediagnostic system for right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound examination operated by individuals without prior ultrasound experience to facilitate deployment of ultrasound to rural and underserved areas.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34379679 PMCID: PMC8357175 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Overview of the RUQ telediagnostic ultrasound system.
Imaging information of the right upper abdominal quadrant is acquired by health personnel of any skill level and is sent through the tablet from the health center for remote imaging interpretation (blue arrows). A diagnostic report is returned to the health center for the health personnel and patient (green arrows).
Fig 2Overview of the RUQ protocol.
The RUQ protocol involves 6 sweeps each beginning and ending with an arc of the probe that has not been illustrated for simplicity. An arc consists of a fan-like motion of the probe (shown in S1 File). The arcing of the probe allows maximal visualization. Steps a-c involve transverse sweeps of the probe in the supine position. Steps d and e are conducted in the left lateral decubitus position. Step f is performed in the standing position. The patient takes a deep breath during each step.
Image quality and organ visualization of all examinations.
| Measure | Level | Percentage (95% confidence interval) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Exams | Acceptable/Excellent Image Quality | ||
| Image Quality | Poor | 36.8% (28.9–45.2%) | - |
| Acceptable | 38.9% (30.9–47.4%) | 61.5% (50.8–71.6%) | |
| Excellent | 24.3% (17.6–32.1%) | 38.5% (28.4–49.2%) | |
| Gallbladder Visualization | <30% | 23.6% (16.9–31.4%) | 7.69% (3.15–15.2%) |
| 30–80% | 22.2% (15.7–29.9%) | 14.3% (7.83–23.2%) | |
| > = 80% | 54.2% (45.7–62.5%) | 78% (68.1–86%) | |
| Pancreas Visualization | No | 56.3% (47.7–64.5%) | 46.2% (35.6–56.9%) |
| Partial/complete | 43.8% (35.5–52.3%) | 53.8% (43.1–64.4%) | |
| Right Kidney Visualization | <30% | 35.4% (27.6–43.8%) | 11% (5.4–19.3%) |
| 30–80% | 36.1% (28.3–44.5%) | 44% (33.6–54.8%) | |
| > = 80% | 28.5% (21.3–36.6%) | 45.1% (34.6–55.8%) | |
| Liver Visualization | <30% | 19.4% (13.3–26.9%) | 2.2% (0.267–7.71%) |
| 30–80% | 38.9% (30.9–47.4%) | 33% (23.5–43.6%) | |
| > = 80% | 41.7% (33.5–50.2%) | 64.8% (54.1–74.6%) | |
Agreement between VSI and standard of care for acceptable/excellent image quality.
| Measure | VSI | Standard of Care Ultrasound | Overall Agreement | Overall agreement (ignoring non-visualized cases) | Cohen’s kappa (95% confidence interval) | Cohen’s kappa (ignoring non-visualized cases) | P value | P value (ignoring non-visualized cases) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver Echogenicity (% Normal) | 86.8% (78.1–93%) | 86.8% (78.1–93%) | 100% | 100% | 1(1–1) | 1(1–1) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Liver Abnormal | 2.2% (0.3–7.7%) | 3.3% (0.7–9.3%) | 98.9% | 98.9% | 0.8(0.41–1.2) | 0.8(0.41–1.2) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Gallbladder Abnormal | 19.8% (12.2–29.4%) | 17.6% (10.4–27%) | 86.8% | 92.9% | 0.69(0.55–0.83) |
| <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Pancreas Abnormal | 0% (0–4.0%) | 0% (0–4.0%) | 100% | 100% | 1 | 1 | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Right Kidney Abnormal | 2.2% (0.3–7.7%) | 1.1% (0.03–6.0%) | 86.2% | 98.7% | 0.13(-0.11–0.37) | 0.66(0.033–1.3) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Exam Abnormal | 22% (14–31.9%) | 20.9% (13.1–30.7%) | 94.5% | 94.5% | 0.84(0.7–0.98) | 0.84(0.7–0.98) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
Significant agreement was found between VSI and standard of care ultrasound. When excluding cases in which a particular organ was not visualized on VSI, this agreement increased. Reported values are percentage (95% confidence interval), with Cohen’s kappa (95% confidence interval) for reader agreement. P values are results of comparing kappa to a theoretical mean of 0.
* Due to one or both sites listing all as one category.
Sensitivity/Specificity for cholelithiasis.
| Measure | Sensitivity (95% CI) | Specificity (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Cholelithiasis (Acceptable/Excellent Image Quality Exams) | 93.3% (68.1–99.8%) | 97.0% (89.5–99.6%) |
| Cholelithiasis After Consensus Read (Acceptable/Excellent Image Quality Exams) | 100% (78.2–100%) | 97.0% (89.5–99.6%) |
| Cholelithiasis (All Exams) | 84.2% (60.4–96.6%) | 97.7% (91.9–99.7%) |
| Cholelithiasis After Consensus Read (All Exams) | 89.5% (66.9–98.7%) | 97.7% (91.9–99.7%) |
Fig 3Normal RUQ VSI exam.
(a) Normal liver identified on transverse VSI scan. (b) Normal gallbladder (arrows) identified on sagittal VSI scan. Transverse (c) and sagittal (d) images of the kidney (arrows) with partial visualization of the liver (*). S2 File includes the cine clips of this exam.
Fig 4Cholelithiasis.
Cholelithiasis with echogenic stone and posterior acoustic shadowing seen on standard of care (a) and VSI (b). Online Video 3 includes a sample cine clip of this study.
Fig 5Gallbladder polyp.
Gallbladder polyp with faint comet tail artifact seen on standard of care (a) and VSI (b).
Fig 6Diffuse hepatic steatosis.
Diffuse hepatic steatosis seen on standard of care imaging (a) and VSI (b). In both images there is significant increase in hepatic echogenicity.