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A vendor-agnostic, PACS integrated, and DICOMcompatible software-server pipeline for testing segmentation algorithms within the clinical radiology workflow

BACKGROUND: Reproducible approaches are needed to bring AI/ML for medical image analysis closer to the bedside. Investigators wishing to shadow test cross-sectional medical imaging segmentation algorithms on new studies in real-time will benefit from simple tools that integrate PACS with on-premises...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhang, Lei, LaBelle, Wayne, Unberath, Mathias, Chen, Haomin, Hu, Jiazhen, Li, Guang, Dreizin, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10168465/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37163064
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2837634/v1
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Reproducible approaches are needed to bring AI/ML for medical image analysis closer to the bedside. Investigators wishing to shadow test cross-sectional medical imaging segmentation algorithms on new studies in real-time will benefit from simple tools that integrate PACS with on-premises image processing, allowing visualization of DICOM-compatible segmentation results and volumetric data at the radiology workstation. PURPOSE: In this work, we develop and release a simple containerized and easily deployable pipeline for shadow testing of segmentation algorithms within the clinical workflow. METHODS: Our end-to-end automated pipeline has two major components-1. a router/listener and anonymizer and an OHIF web viewer backstopped by a DCM4CHEE DICOM query/retrieve archive deployed in the virtual infrastructure of our secure hospital intranet, and 2. An on-premises single GPU workstation host for DICOM/NIfTI conversion steps, and image processing. DICOM images are visualized in OHIF along with their segmentation masks and associated volumetry measurements (in mL) using DICOM SEG and structured report (SR) elements. Feasibility is demonstrated by recording clock times for a traumatic pelvic hematoma cascaded nnU-net model. RESULTS: Mean total clock time from PACS send by user to completion of transfer to the DCM4CHEE query/retrieve archive was 5 minutes 32 seconds (+/− SD of 1 min 26 sec). This compares favorably to the report turnaround times for whole-body CT exams, which often exceed 30 minutes. Inference times accounted for most of the total clock time, ranging from 2 minutes 41 seconds to 8 minutes 27 seconds. All other virtual and on-premises host steps combined ranged from a minimum of 34 seconds to a maximum of 48 seconds. CONCLUSION: The software worked seamlessly with an existing PACS and could be used for deployment of DL models within the radiology workflow for prospective testing on newly scanned patients. Once configured, the pipeline is executed through one command using a single shell script. The code is made publicly available through an open-source license at “https://github.com/vastc/”, and includes a readme file providing pipeline config instructions for host names, series filter, other parameters, and citation instructions for this work.