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Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas

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 suitab...

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Autores principales: Marini, Thomas J., Oppenheimer, Daniel C., Baran, Timothy M., Rubens, Deborah J., Dozier, Ann, Garra, Brian, Egoavil, Miguel S., Quinn, Rosemary A., Kan, Jonah, Ortega, Rafael L., Zhao, Yu T., Tamayo, Lorena, Carlotto, Claudia, Castaneda, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8357175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34379679
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255919
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author Marini, Thomas J.
Oppenheimer, Daniel C.
Baran, Timothy M.
Rubens, Deborah J.
Dozier, Ann
Garra, Brian
Egoavil, Miguel S.
Quinn, Rosemary A.
Kan, Jonah
Ortega, Rafael L.
Zhao, Yu T.
Tamayo, Lorena
Carlotto, Claudia
Castaneda, Benjamin
author_facet Marini, Thomas J.
Oppenheimer, Daniel C.
Baran, Timothy M.
Rubens, Deborah J.
Dozier, Ann
Garra, Brian
Egoavil, Miguel S.
Quinn, Rosemary A.
Kan, Jonah
Ortega, Rafael L.
Zhao, Yu T.
Tamayo, Lorena
Carlotto, Claudia
Castaneda, Benjamin
author_sort Marini, Thomas J.
collection PubMed
description 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. METHODS: The teleultrasound system utilized in this study employs volume sweep imaging and a telemedicine app installed on a tablet which connects to an ultrasound machine. Volume sweep imaging is an ultrasound technique in which an individual scans the target region utilizing preset ultrasound sweeps demarcated by easily recognized external body landmarks. The sweeps are saved as video clips for later interpretation by an experienced radiologist. Teleultrasound scans from a Peruvian clinic obtained by individuals without prior ultrasound experience were sent to the United States for remote interpretation and quality assessment. Standard of care comparison was made to a same-day ultrasound examination performed by a radiologist. RESULTS: Individuals without prior ultrasound experience scanned 144 subjects. Image quality was rated “poor” on 36.8% of exams, “acceptable” on 38.9% of exams, and “excellent” on 24.3% of exams. Among telemedicine exams of “acceptable” or “excellent” image quality (n = 91), greater than 80% of the liver and gallbladder were visualized in the majority of cases. In this group, there was 95% agreement between standard of care and teleultrasound on whether an exam was normal or abnormal, with a Cohen’s kappa of 0.84 (95% CI 0.7–0.98, p <0.0001). Finally, among these teleultrasound exams of “acceptable” or “excellent” image quality, the sensitivity for cholelithiasis was 93% (95% CI 68.1%-99.8%), and the specificity was 97% (95% CI 89.5%-99.6%). CONCLUSION: This asynchronous telediagnostic system allows individuals without prior ultrasound experience to effectively scan the liver, gallbladder, and right kidney with a high degree of agreement with standard of care ultrasound. This system can be deployed to improve access to diagnostic imaging in low-resource areas.
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spelling pubmed-83571752021-08-12 Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas Marini, Thomas J. Oppenheimer, Daniel C. Baran, Timothy M. Rubens, Deborah J. Dozier, Ann Garra, Brian Egoavil, Miguel S. Quinn, Rosemary A. Kan, Jonah Ortega, Rafael L. Zhao, Yu T. Tamayo, Lorena Carlotto, Claudia Castaneda, Benjamin PLoS One Research Article 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. METHODS: The teleultrasound system utilized in this study employs volume sweep imaging and a telemedicine app installed on a tablet which connects to an ultrasound machine. Volume sweep imaging is an ultrasound technique in which an individual scans the target region utilizing preset ultrasound sweeps demarcated by easily recognized external body landmarks. The sweeps are saved as video clips for later interpretation by an experienced radiologist. Teleultrasound scans from a Peruvian clinic obtained by individuals without prior ultrasound experience were sent to the United States for remote interpretation and quality assessment. Standard of care comparison was made to a same-day ultrasound examination performed by a radiologist. RESULTS: Individuals without prior ultrasound experience scanned 144 subjects. Image quality was rated “poor” on 36.8% of exams, “acceptable” on 38.9% of exams, and “excellent” on 24.3% of exams. Among telemedicine exams of “acceptable” or “excellent” image quality (n = 91), greater than 80% of the liver and gallbladder were visualized in the majority of cases. In this group, there was 95% agreement between standard of care and teleultrasound on whether an exam was normal or abnormal, with a Cohen’s kappa of 0.84 (95% CI 0.7–0.98, p <0.0001). Finally, among these teleultrasound exams of “acceptable” or “excellent” image quality, the sensitivity for cholelithiasis was 93% (95% CI 68.1%-99.8%), and the specificity was 97% (95% CI 89.5%-99.6%). CONCLUSION: This asynchronous telediagnostic system allows individuals without prior ultrasound experience to effectively scan the liver, gallbladder, and right kidney with a high degree of agreement with standard of care ultrasound. This system can be deployed to improve access to diagnostic imaging in low-resource areas. Public Library of Science 2021-08-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8357175/ /pubmed/34379679 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255919 Text en © 2021 Marini et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Marini, Thomas J.
Oppenheimer, Daniel C.
Baran, Timothy M.
Rubens, Deborah J.
Dozier, Ann
Garra, Brian
Egoavil, Miguel S.
Quinn, Rosemary A.
Kan, Jonah
Ortega, Rafael L.
Zhao, Yu T.
Tamayo, Lorena
Carlotto, Claudia
Castaneda, Benjamin
Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title_full Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title_fullStr Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title_full_unstemmed Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title_short Testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in Peru: A new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
title_sort testing telediagnostic right upper quadrant abdominal ultrasound in peru: a new horizon in expanding access to imaging in rural and underserved areas
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8357175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34379679
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255919
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