To evaluate the frequency and severity of pulmonary hemorrhage after transthoracic needle lung biopsy (TTLB) and assess possible factors associated with pulmonary hemorrhage.
This retrospective study ...was approved by the institutional review board. The requirement to obtain informed consent was waived. Records from 1113 patients who underwent 1175 TTLBs between January 2008 and April 2013 were retrospectively reviewed. Primary outcomes were pulmonary hemorrhage, documented hemoptysis, and bleeding complications necessitating intervention. Pulmonary hemorrhage was graded as follows: 0, none; 1, less than or equal to 2 cm around the needle; 2, more than 2 cm and sublobar; 3, at least lobar; and 4, hemothorax. Patient, technique, and lesion-related variables were evaluated as predictors of pulmonary hemorrhage. Patient-related variables included main pulmonary artery diameter (mPAD) at computed tomography (CT), pulmonary artery pressures at echocardiography and right-sided heart catheterization, medications, chronic lung disease, bleeding diathesis, and immunodeficiency. Technique- and lesion-related variables included needle gauge, number of passes, pleura-needle angle, lesion size and morphologic characteristics, and distance to pleura. Univariate analysis was performed with χ(2), Fisher exact, and Student t tests.
Pulmonary hemorrhage occurred in 483 of the 1175 TTLBs (41.1%); hemoptysis was documented in 21 of the 1175 TTLBs (1.8%). Higher-grade hemorrhage (grade 2 or higher) occurred in 201 of the 1175 TTLBs (17.1%); five of the 1175 TTLBs (0.4%) necessitated hemorrhage-related admission. Higher-grade hemorrhage was more likely to occur with female sex (P = .001), older age (P = .003), emphysema (P = .004), coaxial technique (P = .025), nonsubpleural location (P < .001), lesion size of 3 cm or smaller (P < .001), and subsolid lesions (P = .028). Enlarged mPAD at CT (≥2.95 cm) was not significantly associated with higher-grade hemorrhage (P = .430).
Pulmonary hemorrhage after TTLB is common but rarely requires intervention. An enlarged mPAD at CT may not be a risk factor for higher-grade hemorrhage.
The purpose of this study was to assess whether implementing emergency department (ED) physician performance feedback reports improves adherence to evidence-based guidelines for use of CT for ...evaluation of pulmonary embolism (PE) beyond that achieved with clinical decision support (CDS) alone.
This prospective randomized controlled trial was conducted from January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2013, at an urban level 1 adult trauma center ED. Attending physicians were stratified into quartiles by use of CT for evaluation of PE in 2012 and were randomized to receive quarterly feedback reporting or not, beginning January 2013. Reports consisted of individual and anonymized group data on guideline adherence (using the Wells criteria), use of CT for PE (number of CT examinations for PE per 1000 patients), and yield (percentage of CT examinations for PE with positive findings). We compared guideline adherence (primary outcome) and use and yield (secondary outcomes) of CT for PE between the control and intervention groups in 2013 and with historical imaging data from 2012.
Of 109,793 ED patients during the control and intervention periods, 2167 (2.0%) underwent CT for evaluation of PE. In the control group, guideline adherence remained unchanged between 2012 (78.8% 476/604) and 2013 (77.2% 421/545) (p = 0.5); in the intervention group, guideline adherence increased 8.8% after feedback report implementation, from 78.3% (426/544) to 85.2% (404/474) (p < 0.05). Use and yield were unchanged in both groups.
Implementation of quarterly feedback reporting resulted in a modest but significant increase in adherence to evidence-based guidelines for use of CT for evaluation of PE in ED patients, enhancing the impact of CDS alone. These results suggest potentially synergistic effects of traditional performance improvement tools with CDS to improve guideline adherence.
The most recent edition of the prostate imaging reporting and data system (PI-RADS version 2) was developed based on expert consensus of the international working group on prostate cancer. It ...provides the minimum acceptable technical standards for MR image acquisition and suggests a structured method for multiparametric prostate MRI (mpMRI) reporting. T1-weighted, T2-weighted (T2W), diffusion-weighted (DWI), and dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) imaging are the suggested sequences to include in mpMRI. The PI-RADS version 2 scoring system enables the reader to assess and rate all focal lesions detected at mpMRI to determine the likelihood of a clinically significant cancer. According to PI-RADS v2, a lesion with a Gleason score ≥7, volume >0.5 cc, or extraprostatic extension is considered clinically significant. PI-RADS v2 uses the concept of a dominant MR sequence based on zonal location of the lesion rather than summing each component score, as was the case in version 1. The dominant sequence in the peripheral zone is DWI and the corresponding apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map, with a secondary role for DCE in equivocal cases (PI-RADS score 3). For lesions in the transition zone, T2W images are the dominant sequence with DWI/ADC images playing a supporting role in the case of an equivocal lesion.
The School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester; and Institute of Child Health, Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, United Kingdom
Dunne, Mark J., Karen E. Cosgrove, Ruth M. ...Shepherd, Albert Aynsley-Green, and Keith J. Lindley. Hyperinsulinism in Infancy: From Basic Science to Clinical Disease. Physiol Rev 84: 239275, 2004; 10.1152/physrev.00022.2003.Ion channelopathies have now been described in many well-characterized cell types including neurons, myocytes, epithelial cells, and endocrine cells. However, in only a few cases has the relationship between altered ion channel function, cell biology, and clinical disease been defined. Hyperinsulinism in infancy (HI) is a rare, potentially lethal condition of the newborn and early childhood. The causes of HI are varied and numerous, but in almost all cases they share a common target protein, the ATP-sensitive K + channel. From gene defects in ion channel subunits to defects in -cell metabolism and anaplerosis, this review describes the relationship between pathogenesis and clinical medicine. Until recently, HI was generally considered an orphan disease, but as parallel defects in ion channels, enzymes, and metabolic pathways also give rise to diabetes and impaired insulin release, the HI paradigm has wider implications for more common disorders of the endocrine pancreas and the molecular physiology of ion transport.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. J. Dunne, Research Division of Physiology and Pharmacology, The School of Biological Sciences, G38 Stopford Building, Univ. of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, UK (E-mail: mark.j.dunne{at}man.ac.uk ).
To determine the effect of clinical decision support (CDS) on the use and yield of inpatient computed tomographic (CT) pulmonary angiography for acute pulmonary embolism (PE).
This HIPAA-compliant, ...institutional review board-approved study with waiver of informed consent included all adults admitted to a 793-bed teaching hospital from April 1, 2007, to June 30, 2012. The CDS intervention, implemented after a baseline observation period, informed providers who placed an order for CT pulmonary angiographic imaging about the pretest probability of the study based on a validated decision rule. Use of CT pulmonary angiographic and admission data from administrative databases was obtained for this study. By using a validated natural language processing algorithm on radiology reports, each CT pulmonary angiographic examination was classified as positive or negative for acute PE. Primary outcome measure was monthly use of CT pulmonary angiography per 1000 admissions. Secondary outcome was CT pulmonary angiography yield (percentage of CT pulmonary angiographic examinations that were positive for acute PE). Linear trend analysis was used to assess for effect and trend differences in use and yield of CT pulmonary angiographic imaging before and after CDS.
In 272 374 admissions over the study period, 5287 patients underwent 5892 CT pulmonary angiographic examinations. A 12.3% decrease in monthly use of CT pulmonary angiography (26.0 to 22.8 CT pulmonary angiographic examinations per 1000 admissions before and after CDS, respectively; P = .008) observed 1 month after CDS implementation was sustained over the ensuing 32-month period. There was a nonsignificant 16.3% increase in monthly yield of CT pulmonary angiography or percentage of CT pulmonary angiographic examinations positive for acute PE after CDS (P = .65).
Implementation of evidence-based CDS for inpatients was associated with a 12.3% immediate and sustained decrease in use of CT pulmonary angiographic examinations in the evaluation of inpatients for acute PE. for this article.
Purpose
To evaluate T2w and DWI image quality using a wearable pelvic coil (WPC) compared with an endorectal coil (ERC).
Methods
Twenty men consecutively presenting to our prostate cancer MRI clinic ...were prospectively consented to be scanned using a wearable pelvic coil then an endorectal coil and pelvic phased array coil at 3T. Eighteen patients were suitable for inclusion. Axial T2w images were obtained using the WPC and ERC, and DWI images were obtained using the WPC, ERC, and PPA. Analysis was performed in consensus by two readers with experience in prostate MRI. The readers scored the T2w images using six qualitative criteria and the DWI images using five criteria. Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was also measured.
Results
T2w artifact severity was greater for an ERC than a WPC (
p
= 0.003). There was no significant difference in T2w qualititatve image quality by other measures. The distinction of zonal anatomy on DWI was superior for an ERC compared with both a WPC and a PPA (
p
= 0.018 and
p
< 0.001 respectively), and there was no significant difference in DWI image quality by other measures. SNR was significantly higher for ERC imaging for both T2w and DWI.
Conclusion
WPC imaging provides comparable image quality to that of an ERC, potentially reducing the need for an ERC. WPC imaging shows reduced T2w artifact severity and inferior DWI zonal anatomy distinction compared with an ERC. Imaging with a WPC produces a lower SNR than an ERC.
To assess safety and effectiveness of percutaneous image-guided cryoablation of hepatic tumors adjacent to the gallbladder.
Twenty-one cryoablation procedures were performed to treat 19 hepatic ...tumors (mean size, 2.7 cm; range, 1.0-5.0 cm) adjacent to the gallbladder in 17 patients (11 male; mean age, 59.2 y; range, 40-82 y) under computed tomography (n = 15) or magnetic resonance imaging (n = 6) guidance in a retrospective study. All tumors (mean size, 2.67 cm; range, 1.0-5.0 cm) were within 1 cm (mean, 0.4 cm) of the gallbladder; seven (33%) were contiguous with the gallbladder. Primary outcomes included complication rate and severity and postprocedure gallbladder imaging findings. Secondary outcomes included technical success and technique effectiveness at 6 months.
Complications occurred in six of 21 procedures (29%); one (5%) was severe. Ice balls extended into the gallbladder lumen in 20 of 21 procedures (95%); no gallbladder-related complications occurred. The most common gallbladder imaging finding was mild, asymptomatic focal wall thickening after nine of 21 procedures (42%), which resolved on follow-up. Technical success was achieved in 19 of 21 sessions (90%). Six-month follow-up was available for 16 tumors; of these, all but two (87%) had no imaging evidence of local tumor progression.
Percutaneous cryoablation of hepatic tumors adjacent to the gallbladder can be performed safely and successfully. Although postprocedural gallbladder changes are common, they are self-limited and clinically inconsequential, even when the ice ball extends into the gallbladder lumen.
The purpose of this study is to determine the interobserver agreement of the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System version 2 (PI-RADSv2) for diagnosing prostate cancer using in-bore MRI-guided ...prostate biopsy as the reference standard.
Fifty-nine patients underwent in-bore MRI-guided prostate biopsy between January 21, 2010, and August 21, 2013, and underwent diagnostic multiparametric MRI 6 months or less before biopsy. A single index lesion per patient was selected after retrospective review of MR images. Three fellowship-trained abdominal radiologists (with 1-11 years' experience) blinded to clinical information interpreted all studies according to PI-RADSv2. Interobserver agreement was assessed using Cohen kappa statistics.
Thirty-eight lesions were in the peripheral zone and 21 were in the transition zone. Cancer was diagnosed in 26 patients (44%). Overall PI-RADS scores were higher for all biopsy-positive lesions (mean ± SD, 3.9 ± 1.1) than for biopsy-negative lesions (3.1 ± 1.0; p < 0.0001) and for clinically significant lesions (4.2 ± 1.0) than for clinically insignificant lesions (3.1 ± 1.0; p < 0.0001). Overall suspicion score interobserver agreement was moderate (κ = 0.45). There was moderate interobserver agreement among overall PI-RADS scores in the peripheral zone (κ = 0.46) and fair agreement in the transition zone (κ = 0.36).
PI-RADSv2 scores were higher in the biopsy-positive group. PI-RADSv2 showed moderate interobserver agreement among abdominal radiologists with no prior experience using the scoring system.
Because glucokinase is a metabolic sensor involved in the regulated release of insulin, we have investigated the acute actions of novel glucokinase activator compound 50 (GKA50) on islet function. ...Insulin secretion was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and microfluorimetry with fura-2 was used to examine intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis (Ca(2+)(i)) in isolated mouse, rat, and human islets of Langerhans and in the MIN6 insulin-secreting mouse cell line. In rodent islets and MIN6 cells, 1 micromol/l GKA50 was found to stimulate insulin secretion and raise Ca(2+)(i) in the presence of glucose (2-10 mmol/l). Similar effects on insulin release were also seen in isolated human islets. GKA50 (1 micromol/l) caused a leftward shift in the glucose-concentration response profiles, and the half-maximal effective concentration (EC(50)) values for glucose were shifted by 3 mmol/l in rat islets and approximately 10 mmol/l in MIN6 cells. There was no significant effect of GKA50 on the maximal rates of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. In the absence of glucose, GKA50 failed to elevate Ca(2+)(i) (1 micromol/l GKA50) or to stimulate insulin release (30 nmol/l-10 micromol/l GKA50). At 5 mmol/l glucose, the EC(50) for GKA50 in MIN6 cells was approximately 0.3 micromol/l. Inhibition of glucokinase with mannoheptulose or 5-thioglucose selectively inhibited the action of GKA50 on insulin release but not the effects of tolbutamide. Similarly, 3-methoxyglucose prevented GKA50-induced rises in Ca(2+)(i) but not the actions of tolbutamide. Finally, the ATP-sensitive K(+) channel agonist diazoxide (200 micromol/l) inhibited GKA50-induced insulin release and its elevation of Ca(2+)(i.) We show that GKA50 is a glucose-like activator of beta-cell metabolism in rodent and human islets and a Ca(2+)-dependent modulator of insulin secretion.
Current health care reform in the United States is producing a shift in radiology practice from the traditional volume-based role of performing and interpreting a large number of examinations to ...providing a more affordable and higher-quality service centered on patient outcomes, which is described as a value-based approach to the provision of health care services. In the 1990 s, evidence-based medicine was defined as the integration of current best evidence with clinical expertise and patient values. When these methods are applied outside internal medicine, the process is called evidence-based practice (EBP). EBP facilitates understanding, interpretation, and application of the best current evidence into radiology practice, which optimizes patient care. It has been incorporated into "Practice-based Learning and Improvement" and "Systems-based Practice," which are two of the six core resident competencies of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and two of the 12 American Board of Radiology milestones for diagnostic radiology. Noninterpretive skills, such as systems-based practice, are also formally assessed in the "Quality and Safety" section of the American Board of Radiology Core and Certifying examinations. This article describes (a) the EBP framework, with particular focus on its relevance to the American Board of Radiology certification and maintenance of certification curricula; (b) how EBP can be integrated into a residency program; and (c) the current value and likely place of EBP in the radiology information technology infrastructure. Online supplemental material is available for this article.