235 results on '"Girometti, R."'
Search Results
52. MRI scoring system including dynamic motility evaluation in assessing the activity of Crohn's disease of the terminal ileum.
- Author
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Girometti R, Zuiani C, Toso F, Brondani G, Sorrentino D, Avellini C, and Bazzocchi M
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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53. A0847 - Clinical Application of Bladder MRI and Vesical Imaging-Reporting And Data System.
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Panebianco, V., Briganti, A., Boellaard, T.N., Catto, J., Compera, E., Efstathiou, J., Van Der Heijden, A.G., Giannarini, G., Girometti, R., Mertens, L., Takeuchi, M., Muglia, V.F., Narumi, Y., Novara, G., Pecoraro, M., Roupret, M., Sanguedolce, F., Santini, D., Shariat, S.F., and Simone, G.
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CLINICAL medicine , *BLADDER , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
54. Fifty years of Shannon information theory in assessing the accuracy and agreement of diagnostic tests
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Alberto Casagrande, Francesco Fabris, Rossano Girometti, Casagrande, A., Fabris, F., and Girometti, R.
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Quality measures ,Diagnostic information ,Diagnostic test performance ,Informational diagnostic channels ,Inter-rater agreement ,Shannon information theory ,Diagnostic Tests, Routine ,Quality measure ,Biomedical Engineering ,COVID-19 ,Informational diagnostic channel ,Computer Science Applications ,Humans ,Diagnostic Tests ,Routine ,Human - Abstract
Since 1948, Shannon theoretic methods for modeling information have found a wide range of applications in several areas where information plays a key role, which goes well beyond the original scopes for which they have been conceived, namely data compression and error correction over a noisy channel. Among other uses, these methods have been applied in the broad field of medical diagnostics since the 1970s, to quantify diagnostic information, to evaluate diagnostic test performance, but also to be used as technical tools in image processing and registration. This review illustrates the main contributions in assessing the accuracy of diagnostic tests and the agreement between raters, focusing on diagnostic test performance measurements and paired agreement evaluation. This work also presents a recent unified, coherent, and hopefully, final information-theoretical approach to deal with the flows of information involved among the patient, the diagnostic test performed to appraise the state of disease, and the raters who are checking the test results. The approach is assessed by considering two case studies: the first one is related to evaluating extra-prostatic cancers; the second concerns the quality of rapid tests for COVID-19 detection.
- Published
- 2022
55. Measuring the Quality of Diagnostic Prostate Magnetic Resonance Imaging: A Urologist's Perspective
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Gianluca Giannarini, Anwar R. Padhani, Claudio Valotto, Alberto Briganti, Rossano Girometti, Fabrizio Dal Moro, Giannarini, G., Valotto, C., Girometti, R., Dal Moro, F., Briganti, A., and Padhani, A. R.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Urology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Urologists ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Multidisciplinary team ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prostate ,medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business - Abstract
Focus on the quality of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) by radiologists is welcome, but the clinical impacts that arise from MRI scans still need urological expertise. The urologist perspective is required in a multidisciplinary team setting when making decisions on whether to repeat a scan or perform a biopsy. This can ensure effective use of the prostate MRI diagnostic pathway in delivering desired clinical benefits for patients.
- Published
- 2020
56. P19 - Prospective validation of prostate imaging reporting and data system version 2 on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging in detecting clinically significant prostate cancer with pathology after radical prostatectomy as the reference standard.
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Giannarini, G., Crestani, A., Rossanese, M., Calandriello, M., Girometti, R., Cereser, L., Sioletic, S., Zuiani, C., Valotto, C., and Ficarra, V.
- Subjects
- *
PROSTATE cancer , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *PROSTATECTOMY , *FALSE discovery rate - Published
- 2018
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57. P14 - How good is inter-reader agreement of prostate imaging reporting and data system version 2 in detecting prostate cancer with multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging? A prospective multi-reader study with whole-mount sections as the reference standard.
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Giannarini, G., Crestani, A., Rossanese, M., Calandriello, M., Girometti, R., Cereser, L., Como, G., Sioletic, S., Valotto, C., and Ficarra, V.
- Subjects
- *
PROSTATE cancer , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RADIOLOGISTS , *UROLOGICAL nursing - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
58. Differentiating small (<=1 cm) focal liver lesions as metastases or cysts by means of Computed Tomography: a case-study to illustrate a fuzzy logic-based method to assess the impact of diagnostic confidence on radiological diagnosis
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Rossano Girometti, Gloria Zanella, Andrea Sgarro, Giuseppe Como, Lorenzo Cereser, Chiara Zuiani, Serena Pullini, Francesco Fabris, Massimo Bazzocchi, Girometti, R, Fabris, Francesco, Sgarro, Andrea, G., Zanella, S., Pullini, L., Cereser, G., Como, C., Zuiani, and M., Bazzocchi
- Subjects
Male ,Diagnostic Confidence ,Radiology ,Fuzzy logic ,Binary and fuzzy classification ,Computed tomography ,False positive paradox ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Medical diagnosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Applied Mathematics ,Liver Neoplasms ,Uncertainty ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Liver ,Modeling and Simulation ,Radiological weapon ,Predictive value of tests ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Female ,Algorithms ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Article Subject ,Radiological diagnosis ,Malignancy ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Medical Informatics - Abstract
Purpose. To quantify the impact of diagnostic confidence on radiological diagnosis with a fuzzy logic-based method.Materials and Methods. Twenty-two oncologic patients with 20 cysts and 30 metastases ≤1 cm in size found at 64-row computed tomography were included. Two readers (R1/R2) expressed diagnoses as a subjective level of confidenceP(d)in malignancy within the interval [0,1] rather than on a “crisp” basis (malignant/benign); confidence in benignancy was1-p(d). When cross-tabulating data according to the standard of reference,2×2table cells resulted from the aggregation betweenp(d)/1-p(d)and final diagnosis. We then assessed (i) readers diagnostic performance on a fuzzy and crisp basis; (ii) the “divergence”δ(F,C)(%) as a measure of how confidence impacted on crisp diagnosis.Results. Diagnoses expressed with lower confidence increased fuzzy false positives compared to crisp ones (from 0 to 0.2 for R1; from 1 to 2.4 for R2). Crisp/fuzzy accuracy was 94.0%/93.6% (R1) and 94.0/91.6% (R2).δ(F,C)(%) was larger in the case of the less experienced reader (R2) (up to +7.95% for specificity). According to simulations,δ(F,C)(%) was negative/positive depending on the level of confidence in incorrect diagnoses.Conclusion.Fuzzy evaluation shows a measurable effect of uncertainty on radiological diagnoses.
- Published
- 2014
59. La diagnosi radiologica alla luce della Teoria dell’Informazione: prospettive e potenziali applicazioni
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Girometti, Rossano, Zuiani, Chiara, Bazzocchi, Massimo, FABRIS, FRANCESCO, Girometti, R, Fabris, Francesco, Zuiani, C, Bazzocchi, M., Girometti, Rossano, Zuiani, Chiara, and Bazzocchi, Massimo
- Subjects
Valutazione della qualità dei lettori ,Misura della qualità di un test diagnostico ,Test diagnostici multivalore ,Classificatori binary ,Misura della performance di un test diagnostico ,Metriche di valutazione delle curve ROC ,Classificatori binari ,Mutua Informazione e Capacità del canale - Abstract
La Teoria dell'Informazione di Shannon (TI) è un solido apparato matematicoconcettuale alla base della tecnologia delle telecomunicazioni. In questo lavoro proponiamo un modello del processo diagnostico basato sulla TI; illustriamo inoltre come sia possibile ricavare coerentemente una misura riassuntiva di accuratezza di un qualunque test diagnostico (p.es. di un qualunque esame radiologico), tanto nel caso dicotomico, quanto nel caso multivalore, partendo da alcune misure d'informazione introdotte nella TI. Proponiamo e discutiamo anche un esempio concreto d'impiego del modello in ambito radiologico, nella convinzione che la Radiologia possa essere terreno fertile di applicazione di strumenti concettuali di tipo informazionale, che possano complementare e rifinire l'analisi statistica standard di accuratezza diagnostica.
- Published
- 2014
60. Indications for breast magnetic resonance imaging. Consensus Document 'Attualità in Senologia', Florence 2007
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Franca Podo, L. Martincich, F. Pane, Massimo Calabrese, Francesco Sardanelli, C. Alfano, Simonetta Bianchi, Morrone D, Gianluca Valeri, Massimo Bazzocchi, Alfonso Fausto, Chiara Zuiani, Panzarola P, Gme Simonetti, Rossano Girometti, Pietro Panizza, Massimo Federico, A. Del Maschio, Paolo Belli, Luca Alessandro Carbonaro, S. Morassutt, A. Luini, E. Cossu, M. Gennaro, Siranoush Manoukian, Anna Cilotti, C. Di Maggio, Gian Marco Giuseppetti, Laura Cortesi, Giuseppe Canavese, Ienzi R, M. Rosselli Del Turco, Lorenza Marotti, Stefano Corcione, Antonio Orlacchio, Luigi Cataliotti, Anastassia Esseridou, Pietro Torricelli, Riccardo Ponzone, Jacopo Nori, Sardanelli, F, Giuseppetti, Gm, Canavese, G, Cataliotti, L, Corcione, S, Cossu, E, Federico, M, Marotti, L, Martincich, L, Panizza, P, Podo, F, Rosselli Del Turco, M, Zuiani, C, Alfano, C, Bazzocchi, M, Belli, P, Bianchi, S, Cilotti, A, Calabrese, M, Carbonaro, L, Cortesi, L, Di Maggio, C, DEL MASCHIO, Alessandro, Esseridou, A, Fausto, A, Gennaro, M, Girometti, R, Ienzi, R, Luini, A, Manoukian, S, Morassutt, S, Morrone, D, Nori, J, Orlacchio, A, Pane, F, Panzarola, P, Ponzone, R, Simonetti, G, Torricelli, P, and Valeri, G.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast imaging ,Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging - Breast diseases - Indications ,Breast Neoplasms ,Breast magnetic resonance imaging ,Nipple discharge ,Breast diseases ,Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Mammography ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Interventional radiology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The clinical use of breast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is increasing, especially for applications requiring paramagnetic contrast-agent injection. This document presents a synthetic list of acceptable indications with potential advantages for women according to evidence from the literature and the expert opinion of the panel that developed this statement. We generally recommend that breast MR imaging be performed in centres with experience in conventional breast imaging [mammography and ultrasonography (US)] and needle-biopsy procedures (under stereotactic or US guidance) as well as in breast MR imaging and second-look US for findings not revealed by conventional imaging performed before MR imaging. In our opinion, there is no evidence in favour of breast MR imaging as a diagnostic tool to characterise equivocal findings at conventional imaging when needle-biopsy procedures can be performed, nor for the study of asymptomatic, non-high-risk women with negative conventional imaging. After a description of technical and methodological requirements, we define the indications and limitations of breast MR imaging for surveillance of high-risk women, local staging before surgery, evaluation of the effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, breast previously treated for carcinoma, carcinoma of unknown primary syndrome, nipple discharge and breast implants.
- Published
- 2008
61. PI-QUAL version 2: the radiologist's perspective.
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Ponsiglione A and Girometti R
- Published
- 2024
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62. Active surveillance of prostate cancer: MRI and beyond.
- Author
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Girometti R and Giganti F
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Watchful Waiting methods, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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63. PI-QUAL version 2: A Multi-Reader reproducibility study on multiparametric MRI from a tertiary referral center.
- Author
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Ponsiglione A, Cereser L, Spina E, Mannacio L, Negroni D, Russo L, Muto F, Di Costanzo G, Stanzione A, Cuocolo R, Imbriaco M, and Girometti R
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess the inter-reader and intra-reader agreement of the Prostate imaging quality version 2 (PI-QUAL v.2) for multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) among radiologists with varying levels of expertise., Methods: Fifty men underwent 3 T mpMRI scans in a tertiary referral center. Images were anonymized and assessed by six readers of different expertise (2 expert, 2 basic and 2 beginners) in two sessions: first using PI-QUAL v.2, and then using both PI-QUAL v.2 and v.1 after a 2-week interval. PI-QUAL v.2 scores were considered overall and, for comparison with PI-QUAL v.1, dichotomized according to the threshold of acceptable image quality. Gwet AC
1 index was used to calculate the inter-reader and intra-reader agreement of the scores., Results: The inter-reader agreement for PI-QUAL v.2 scores was overall moderate (Gwet's AC1 = 0.55), being higher for expert readers compared to the beginner and basic ones (Gwet's AC1 = 0.66 versus 0.45-0-58). Intra-reader agreement varied from moderate to perfect (Gwet's AC1 = 0.43-1.00) and improved with increasing levels of expertise. The ratings were more reproducible for DWI and DCE sequences (Gwet's AC1 = 0.62-1.00) compared to T2w (Gwet's AC1 = 0.24-0.70). The intra-reader agreement between PI-QUAL v.2 and v.1 scores across readings ranged from almost perfect to perfect (Gwet's AC1 = 0.96-1.00)., Conclusions: In a tertiary referral center context, PI-QUAL v.2 is a moderately reliable tool for standardizing prostate mpMRI quality evaluations among readers with varying expertise., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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64. Impact of an expert-derived, quick hands-on tool on classifying pulmonary hypertension in chest computed tomography: a study on inexperienced readers using RAPID-CT-PH.
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Cereser L, Zussino G, Cicciò C, Tullio A, Montanaro C, Driussi M, Di Poi E, Patruno V, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Clinical Competence, Contrast Media, Observer Variation, Radiography, Thoracic methods, Adult, Hypertension, Pulmonary diagnostic imaging, Hypertension, Pulmonary classification, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To test the inter-reader agreement in classifying pulmonary hypertension (PH) on chest contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) between a consensus of two cardio-pulmonary-devoted radiologists (CRc) and inexperienced readers (radiology residents, RRs) when using a CECT-based quick hands-on tool built upon PH imaging literature, i.e., the "Rapid Access and Practical Information Digest on Computed Tomography for PH-RAPID-CT-PH"., Material and Methods: The observational study retrospectively included 60 PH patients who underwent CECT between 2015 and 2022. Four RRs independently reviewed all CECTs and classified each case into one of the five PH groups per the 2022 ESC/ERS guidelines. While RR3 and RR4 (RAPID-CT-PH group) used RAPID-CT-PH, RR1 and RR2 (control group) did not. RAPID-CT-PH and control groups' reports were compared with CRc using unweighted Cohen's Kappa (k) statistics. RRs' report completeness and reporting time were also compared using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test., Results: The inter-reader agreement in classifying PH between the RAPID-CT-PH group and CRc was substantial (k = 0.75 for RR3 and k = 0.65 for RR4); while, it was only moderate for the control group (k = 0.57 for RR1 and k = 0.49 for RR2). Using RAPID-CT-PH resulted in significantly higher report completeness (all p < 0.0001) and significantly lower reporting time (p < 0.0001) compared to the control group., Conclusion: RRs using RAPID-CT-PH showed a substantial agreement with CRc on CECT-based PH classification. RAPID-CT-PH improved report completeness and reduced reporting time. A quick hands-on tool for classifying PH on chest CECT may help inexperienced radiologists effectively contribute to the PH multidisciplinary team., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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65. Case-by-case combination of the prostate imaging reporting and data system version 2.1 with the Likert score to reduce the false-positives of prostate MRI: a proof-of-concept study.
- Author
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Girometti R, Peruzzi V, Polizzi P, De Martino M, Cereser L, Casarotto L, Pizzolitto S, Isola M, Crestani A, Giannarini G, and Zuiani C
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Middle Aged, False Positive Reactions, Proof of Concept Study, Sensitivity and Specificity, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostate pathology, Radiology Information Systems, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To retrospectively investigate whether a case-by-case combination of the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System version 2.1 (PI-RADS) with the Likert score improves the diagnostic performance of mpMRI for clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa), especially by reducing false-positives., Methods: One hundred men received mpMRI between January 2020 and April 2021, followed by prostate biopsy. Reader 1 (R1) and reader 2 (R2) (experience of > 3000 and < 200 mpMRI readings) independently reviewed mpMRIs with the PI-RADS version 2.1. After unveiling clinical information, they were free to add (or not) a Likert score to upgrade or downgrade or reinforce the level of suspicion of the PI-RADS category attributed to the index lesion or, rather, identify a new index lesion. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of R1/R2 in detecting csPCa when biopsying PI-RADS ≥ 3 index-lesions (strategy 1) versus PI-RADS ≥ 3 or Likert ≥ 3 index-lesions (strategy 2), with decision curve analysis to assess the net benefit. In strategy 2, the Likert score was considered dominant in determining biopsy decisions., Results: csPCa prevalence was 38%. R1/R2 used combined PI-RADS and Likert categorization in 28%/18% of examinations relying mainly on clinical features such as prostate specific antigen level and digital rectal examination than imaging findings. The specificity/positive predictive values were 66.1/63.1% for R1 (95%CI 52.9-77.6/54.5-70.9) and 50.0/51.6% (95%CI 37.0-63.0/35.5-72.4%) for R2 in the case of PI-RADS-based readings, and 74.2/69.2% for R1 (95%CI 61.5-84.5/59.4-77.5%) and 56.6/54.2% (95%CI 43.3-69.0/37.1-76.6%) for R2 in the case of combined PI-RADS/Likert readings. Sensitivity/negative predictive values were unaffected. Strategy 2 achieved greater net benefit as a trigger of biopsy for R1 only., Conclusion: Case-by-case combination of the PI-RADS version 2.1 with Likert score translated into a mild but measurable impact in reducing the false-positives of PI-RADS categorization, though greater net benefit in reducing unnecessary biopsies was found in the experienced reader only., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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66. Right frontal cingulate cortex mediates the effect of prenatal complications on youth internalizing behaviors.
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Maggioni E, Pigoni A, Fontana E, Delvecchio G, Bonivento C, Bianchi V, Mauri M, Bellina M, Girometti R, Agarwal N, Nobile M, and Brambilla P
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Child, Adolescent, Male, Gray Matter pathology, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects, Frontal Lobe, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Prenatal and perinatal complications represent well-known risk factors for the future development of psychiatric disorders. Such influence might become manifested during childhood and adolescence, as key periods for brain and behavioral changes. Internalizing and externalizing behaviors in adolescence have been associated with the risk of psychiatric onset later in life. Both brain morphology and behavior seem to be affected by obstetric complications, but a clear link among these three aspects is missing. Here, we aimed at analyzing the association between prenatal and perinatal complications, behavioral issues, and brain volumes in a group of children and adolescents. Eighty-two children and adolescents with emotional-behavioral problems underwent clinical and 3 T brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) assessments. The former included information on behavior, through the Child Behavior Checklist/6-18 (CBCL/6-18), and on the occurrence of obstetric complications. The relationships between clinical and gray matter volume (GMV) measures were investigated through multiple generalized linear models and mediation models. We found a mutual link between prenatal complications, GMV alterations in the frontal gyrus, and withdrawn problems. Specifically, complications during pregnancy were associated with higher CBCL/6-18 withdrawn scores and GMV reductions in the right superior frontal gyrus and anterior cingulate cortex. Finally, a mediation effect of these GMV measures on the association between prenatal complications and the withdrawn dimension was identified. Our findings suggest a key role of obstetric complications in affecting brain structure and behavior. For the first time, a mediator role of frontal GMV in the relationship between prenatal complications and internalizing symptoms was suggested. Once replicated on independent cohorts, this evidence will have relevant implications for planning preventive interventions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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67. Preoperative breast MRI positively impacts surgical outcomes of needle biopsy-diagnosed pure DCIS: a patient-matched analysis from the MIPA study.
- Author
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Cozzi A, Di Leo G, Houssami N, Gilbert FJ, Helbich TH, Álvarez Benito M, Balleyguier C, Bazzocchi M, Bult P, Calabrese M, Camps Herrero J, Cartia F, Cassano E, Clauser P, de Lima Docema MF, Depretto C, Dominelli V, Forrai G, Girometti R, Harms SE, Hilborne S, Ienzi R, Lobbes MBI, Losio C, Mann RM, Montemezzi S, Obdeijn IM, Aksoy Ozcan U, Pediconi F, Pinker K, Preibsch H, Raya Povedano JL, Rossi Saccarelli C, Sacchetto D, Scaperrotta GP, Schlooz M, Szabó BK, Taylor DB, Ulus SÖ, Van Goethem M, Veltman J, Weigel S, Wenkel E, Zuiani C, and Sardanelli F
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Young Adult, Adolescent, Preoperative Care methods, Treatment Outcome, Biopsy, Needle, Breast diagnostic imaging, Breast pathology, Breast surgery, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating surgery, Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating pathology, Mastectomy methods, Reoperation statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the influence of preoperative breast MRI on mastectomy and reoperation rates in patients with pure ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)., Methods: The MIPA observational study database (7245 patients) was searched for patients aged 18-80 years with pure unilateral DCIS diagnosed at core needle or vacuum-assisted biopsy (CNB/VAB) and planned for primary surgery. Patients who underwent preoperative MRI (MRI group) were matched (1:1) to those who did not receive MRI (noMRI group) according to 8 confounding covariates that drive referral to MRI (age; hormonal status; familial risk; posterior-to-nipple diameter; BI-RADS category; lesion diameter; lesion presentation; surgical planning at conventional imaging). Surgical outcomes were compared between the matched groups with nonparametric statistics after calculating odds ratios (ORs)., Results: Of 1005 women with pure unilateral DCIS at CNB/VAB (507 MRI group, 498 noMRI group), 309 remained in each group after matching. First-line mastectomy rate in the MRI group was 20.1% (62/309 patients, OR 2.03) compared to 11.0% in the noMRI group (34/309 patients, p = 0.003). The reoperation rate was 10.0% in the MRI group (31/309, OR for reoperation 0.40) and 22.0% in the noMRI group (68/309, p < 0.001), with a 2.53 OR of avoiding reoperation in the MRI group. The overall mastectomy rate was 23.3% in the MRI group (72/309, OR 1.40) and 17.8% in the noMRI group (55/309, p = 0.111)., Conclusions: Compared to those going directly to surgery, patients with pure DCIS at CNB/VAB who underwent preoperative MRI had a higher OR for first-line mastectomy but a substantially lower OR for reoperation., Clinical Relevance Statement: When confounding factors behind MRI referral are accounted for in the comparison of patients with CNB/VAB-diagnosed pure unilateral DCIS, preoperative MRI yields a reduction of reoperations that is more than twice as high as the increase in overall mastectomies., Key Points: • Confounding factors cause imbalance when investigating the influence of preoperative MRI on surgical outcomes of pure DCIS. • When patient matching is applied to women with pure unilateral DCIS, reoperation rates are significantly reduced in women who underwent preoperative MRI. • The reduction of reoperations brought about by preoperative MRI is more than double the increase in overall mastectomies., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. Added value of the EUSOBI diffusion levels in breast MRI.
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Zuiani C, Mansutti I, Caronia G, Linda A, Londero V, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Breast diagnostic imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Aged, 80 and over, Contrast Media, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate whether using the diffusion levels (DLs) proposed by the European Society of Breast Imaging (EUSOBI) improves the diagnostic accuracy of breast MRI., Materials and Methods: This retrospective study included 145 women who, between September 2019 and June 2020, underwent breast 1.5-T MRI with DWI. Reader 1 and reader 2 (R1-R2) independently assessed breast lesions using the BI-RADS on dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging and T2-weighted imaging. DWI was subsequently disclosed, allowing readers able to measure lesions ADC and subjectively express the overall risk of malignancy on a 1-5 Likert scale. ADCs were interpreted as a range of values corresponding to the EUSOBI DLs. The analysis evaluated the inter-reader agreement in measuring ADC and DLs, the per-DL malignancy rate, and accuracy for malignancy using ROC analysis against histological examination or a 3-year follow-up., Results: Lesions were malignant and showed non-mass enhancement in 67.7% and 76.1% of cases, respectively. ADC was measurable in 63.2%/66.7% of lesions (R1/R2), with a minimal discrepancy on Bland-Altman analysis and 0.948 (95%CI 0.925-0.965)/0.989 (95%CI 0.988-0.991) intraclass correlation coefficient in measuring ADC/DLs. The malignancy rate (R1/R2) increased from 0.5/0.5% ("very high" DL) to 96.0/96.8% ("very low" DL), as expected. Likert categorization showed larger areas under the curve than the BI-RADS for both R1 (0.91 versus 0.87; p = 0.0208) and R2 (0.91 versus 0.89; p = 0.1171), with improved specificity (81.5% versus 78.5% for R1 and 84.4% versus 81.2% for R2)., Conclusion: Though ADC was not measurable in about one-third of lesions, DLs were categorized with excellent inter-reader agreement, improving the specificity for malignancy., Clinical Relevance Statement: DLs proposed by the EUSOBI are a reproducible tool to interpret the ADC of breast lesions and, in turn, to improve the specificity of breast MRI and reduce unnecessary breast biopsies., Key Points: • The European Society of Breast Imaging proposed diffusion levels for the interpretation of the apparent diffusion coefficient in diffusion-weighted imaging of the breast. • Adding diffusion levels to the interpretation of magnetic resonance imaging improved the diagnostic accuracy for breast cancer, especially in terms of specificity. • Diffusion levels can favor a more widespread and standardized use of diffusion-weighted imaging of the breast., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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69. Clinical application of bladder MRI and the Vesical Imaging-Reporting and Data System.
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Panebianco V, Briganti A, Boellaard TN, Catto J, Comperat E, Efstathiou J, van der Heijden AG, Giannarini G, Girometti R, Mertens L, Takeuchi M, Muglia VF, Narumi Y, Novara G, Pecoraro M, Roupret M, Sanguedolce F, Santini D, Shariat SF, Simone G, Vargas HA, Woo S, Barentsz J, and Witjes JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Research Design, Consensus, Retrospective Studies, Urinary Bladder diagnostic imaging, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Diagnostic work-up and risk stratification in patients with bladder cancer before and after treatment must be refined to optimize management and improve outcomes. MRI has been suggested as a non-invasive technique for bladder cancer staging and assessment of response to systemic therapy. The Vesical Imaging-Reporting And Data System (VI-RADS) was developed to standardize bladder MRI image acquisition, interpretation and reporting and enables accurate prediction of muscle-wall invasion of bladder cancer. MRI is available in many centres but is not yet recommended as a first-line test for bladder cancer owing to a lack of high-quality evidence. Consensus-based evidence on the use of MRI-VI-RADS for bladder cancer care is needed to serve as a benchmark for formulating guidelines and research agendas until further evidence from randomized trials becomes available., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2024
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70. I saw the Torricelli-Bernoulli sign: When physics provides imaging insights.
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Monterubbiano L, Cereser L, D'Alì L, Girometti R, and Zuiani C
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- Humans, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Physics, Ulcer, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
The Torricelli-Bernoulli sign is a rare radiologic sign seen on computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which helps direct the diagnosis of a gastrointestinal tumor. It indicates the presence of non-dependent air trapped within a necrotic ulcer located in a gastrointestinal tumor; sometimes, a vertical stream of bubbles emanating from the opening of the ulcer is present. The term Torricelli-Bernoulli sign first appeared in the literature in 1999, referring to the homonymous physical theorems., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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71. METhodological RadiomICs Score (METRICS): a quality scoring tool for radiomics research endorsed by EuSoMII.
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Kocak B, Akinci D'Antonoli T, Mercaldo N, Alberich-Bayarri A, Baessler B, Ambrosini I, Andreychenko AE, Bakas S, Beets-Tan RGH, Bressem K, Buvat I, Cannella R, Cappellini LA, Cavallo AU, Chepelev LL, Chu LCH, Demircioglu A, deSouza NM, Dietzel M, Fanni SC, Fedorov A, Fournier LS, Giannini V, Girometti R, Groot Lipman KBW, Kalarakis G, Kelly BS, Klontzas ME, Koh DM, Kotter E, Lee HY, Maas M, Marti-Bonmati L, Müller H, Obuchowski N, Orlhac F, Papanikolaou N, Petrash E, Pfaehler E, Pinto Dos Santos D, Ponsiglione A, Sabater S, Sardanelli F, Seeböck P, Sijtsema NM, Stanzione A, Traverso A, Ugga L, Vallières M, van Dijk LV, van Griethuysen JJM, van Hamersvelt RW, van Ooijen P, Vernuccio F, Wang A, Williams S, Witowski J, Zhang Z, Zwanenburg A, and Cuocolo R
- Abstract
Purpose: To propose a new quality scoring tool, METhodological RadiomICs Score (METRICS), to assess and improve research quality of radiomics studies., Methods: We conducted an online modified Delphi study with a group of international experts. It was performed in three consecutive stages: Stage#1, item preparation; Stage#2, panel discussion among EuSoMII Auditing Group members to identify the items to be voted; and Stage#3, four rounds of the modified Delphi exercise by panelists to determine the items eligible for the METRICS and their weights. The consensus threshold was 75%. Based on the median ranks derived from expert panel opinion and their rank-sum based conversion to importance scores, the category and item weights were calculated., Result: In total, 59 panelists from 19 countries participated in selection and ranking of the items and categories. Final METRICS tool included 30 items within 9 categories. According to their weights, the categories were in descending order of importance: study design, imaging data, image processing and feature extraction, metrics and comparison, testing, feature processing, preparation for modeling, segmentation, and open science. A web application and a repository were developed to streamline the calculation of the METRICS score and to collect feedback from the radiomics community., Conclusion: In this work, we developed a scoring tool for assessing the methodological quality of the radiomics research, with a large international panel and a modified Delphi protocol. With its conditional format to cover methodological variations, it provides a well-constructed framework for the key methodological concepts to assess the quality of radiomic research papers., Critical Relevance Statement: A quality assessment tool, METhodological RadiomICs Score (METRICS), is made available by a large group of international domain experts, with transparent methodology, aiming at evaluating and improving research quality in radiomics and machine learning., Key Points: • A methodological scoring tool, METRICS, was developed for assessing the quality of radiomics research, with a large international expert panel and a modified Delphi protocol. • The proposed scoring tool presents expert opinion-based importance weights of categories and items with a transparent methodology for the first time. • METRICS accounts for varying use cases, from handcrafted radiomics to entirely deep learning-based pipelines. • A web application has been developed to help with the calculation of the METRICS score ( https://metricsscore.github.io/metrics/METRICS.html ) and a repository created to collect feedback from the radiomics community ( https://github.com/metricsscore/metrics )., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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72. Unveiling the Potential of Venn Diagrams as a Helpful Tool for Clinical Reasoning: An Illustrative Case-based Discussion.
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Peruzzi V, Torresan S, Cortiula F, Fanelli M, Ermacora P, Girometti R, and Cereser L
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Venn diagrams graphically represent a cognitive approach that can assist in highlighting information shared by different data sets while eliminating nonoverlapping conditions. When applied to clinical reasoning, such an approach helps physicians visually focus on data pertaining to differential diagnoses. We present and discuss a 3-step reasoning pathway derived from a real-life case in which we used Venn diagrams to diagnose drug-related pneumonitis in a 67-year-old man with advanced bladder cancer and nodular lung findings at chest CT. This education paper supports using Venn diagrams in Radiology., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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73. Screening and diagnostic breast MRI: how do they impact surgical treatment? Insights from the MIPA study.
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Cozzi A, Di Leo G, Houssami N, Gilbert FJ, Helbich TH, Álvarez Benito M, Balleyguier C, Bazzocchi M, Bult P, Calabrese M, Camps Herrero J, Cartia F, Cassano E, Clauser P, de Lima Docema MF, Depretto C, Dominelli V, Forrai G, Girometti R, Harms SE, Hilborne S, Ienzi R, Lobbes MBI, Losio C, Mann RM, Montemezzi S, Obdeijn IM, Ozcan UA, Pediconi F, Pinker K, Preibsch H, Raya Povedano JL, Rossi Saccarelli C, Sacchetto D, Scaperrotta GP, Schlooz M, Szabó BK, Taylor DB, Ulus ÖS, Van Goethem M, Veltman J, Weigel S, Wenkel E, Zuiani C, and Sardanelli F
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- Female, Humans, Mastectomy, Mastectomy, Segmental, Breast, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Preoperative Care, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Breast Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: To report mastectomy and reoperation rates in women who had breast MRI for screening (S-MRI subgroup) or diagnostic (D-MRI subgroup) purposes, using multivariable analysis for investigating the role of MRI referral/nonreferral and other covariates in driving surgical outcomes., Methods: The MIPA observational study enrolled women aged 18-80 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer destined to have surgery as the primary treatment, in 27 centres worldwide. Mastectomy and reoperation rates were compared using non-parametric tests and multivariable analysis., Results: A total of 5828 patients entered analysis, 2763 (47.4%) did not undergo MRI (noMRI subgroup) and 3065 underwent MRI (52.6%); of the latter, 2441/3065 (79.7%) underwent MRI with preoperative intent (P-MRI subgroup), 510/3065 (16.6%) D-MRI, and 114/3065 S-MRI (3.7%). The reoperation rate was 10.5% for S-MRI, 8.2% for D-MRI, and 8.5% for P-MRI, while it was 11.7% for noMRI (p ≤ 0.023 for comparisons with D-MRI and P-MRI). The overall mastectomy rate (first-line mastectomy plus conversions from conserving surgery to mastectomy) was 39.5% for S-MRI, 36.2% for P-MRI, 24.1% for D-MRI, and 18.0% for noMRI. At multivariable analysis, using noMRI as reference, the odds ratios for overall mastectomy were 2.4 (p < 0.001) for S-MRI, 1.0 (p = 0.957) for D-MRI, and 1.9 (p < 0.001) for P-MRI., Conclusions: Patients from the D-MRI subgroup had the lowest overall mastectomy rate (24.1%) among MRI subgroups and the lowest reoperation rate (8.2%) together with P-MRI (8.5%). This analysis offers an insight into how the initial indication for MRI affects the subsequent surgical treatment of breast cancer., Key Points: • Of 3065 breast MRI examinations, 79.7% were performed with preoperative intent (P-MRI), 16.6% were diagnostic (D-MRI), and 3.7% were screening (S-MRI) examinations. • The D-MRI subgroup had the lowest mastectomy rate (24.1%) among MRI subgroups and the lowest reoperation rate (8.2%) together with P-MRI (8.5%). • The S-MRI subgroup had the highest mastectomy rate (39.5%) which aligns with higher-than-average risk in this subgroup, with a reoperation rate (10.5%) not significantly different to that of all other subgroups., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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74. Editorial for "Noninvasive Assessment of the Renal Function, Oxford Classification and Prognostic Risk Stratification of IgAN by Using Intravoxel Incoherent Motion Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Blood Oxygenation Level-Dependent MRI".
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Girometti R and Bertolotto M
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- Humans, Prognosis, Kidney diagnostic imaging, Kidney physiology, Risk Assessment, Motion, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
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- 2023
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75. Prostate MRI and PSMA-PET in the Primary Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer.
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Cereser L, Evangelista L, Giannarini G, and Girometti R
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Over the last years, prostate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has gained a key role in the primary diagnosis of clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa). While a negative MRI can avoid unnecessary prostate biopsies and the overdiagnosis of indolent cancers, a positive examination triggers biopsy samples targeted to suspicious imaging findings, thus increasing the diagnosis of csPCa with a sensitivity and negative predictive value of around 90%. The limitations of MRI, including suboptimal positive predictive values, are fueling debate on how to stratify biopsy decisions and management based on patient risk and how to correctly estimate it with clinical and/or imaging findings. In this setting, "next-generation imaging" imaging based on radiolabeled Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA)-Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is expanding its indications both in the setting of primary staging (intermediate-to-high risk patients) and primary diagnosis (e.g., increasing the sensitivity of MRI or acting as a problem-solving tool for indeterminate MRI cases). This review summarizes the current main evidence on the role of prostate MRI and PSMA-PET as tools for the primary diagnosis of csPCa, and the different possible interaction pathways in this setting.
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- 2023
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76. Editorial for "Exploration of Interstitial Fibrosis in Chronic Kidney Disease by Diffusion-Relaxation Correlation Spectrum MR Imaging: A Preliminary Study".
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Girometti R and Bertolotto M
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- Humans, Kidney diagnostic imaging, Kidney pathology, Fibrosis, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diagnostic imaging, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic pathology
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- 2023
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77. Multivariable stratification of PI-RADS version 2.1 categories for the risk of false-positive target biopsy: Impact on prostate biopsy decisions.
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Girometti R, Giannarini G, De Martino M, Caregnato E, Cereser L, Soligo M, Rozze D, Pizzolitto S, Isola M, and Zuiani C
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- Male, Humans, Aged, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Retrospective Studies, Biopsy, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Image-Guided Biopsy methods, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostate pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To identify clinical and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) factors predicting false positive target biopsy (FP-TB) of prostate imaging reporting and data system version 2.1 (PI-RADSv2.1) ≥ 3 findings., Method: We retrospectively included 221 men with and without previous negative prostate biopsy who underwent 3.0 T/1.5 T mpMRI for suspicious clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) between April 2019-July 2021. A study coordinator revised mpMRI reports provided by one of two radiologists (experience of > 1500/>500 mpMRI examinations, respectively) and matched them with the results of transperineal systematic biopsy plus fusion target biopsy (TB) of PI-RADSv2.1 ≥ 3 lesions or PI-RADSv2.1 ≤ 2 men with higher clinical risk. A multivariable model was built to identify features predicting FP-TB of index lesions, defined as the absence of csPCa (International Society of Urogenital Pathology [ISUP] ≥ 2). The model was internally validated with the bootstrap technique, receiving operating characteristics (ROC) analysis, and decision analysis., Results: Features significantly associated with FP-TB were age < 65 years (odds ratio [OR] 2.77), prostate-specific antigen density (PSAD) < 0.15 ng/mL/mL (OR 2.45), PI-RADS 4/5 category vs. category 3 (OR 0.15/0.07), and multifocality (OR 0.46), with a 0.815 area under the curve (AUC) in assessing FP-TB. When adjusting PI-RADSv2.1 categorization for the model, mpMRI showed 87.5% sensitivity and 79.9% specificity for csPCa, with a greater net benefit in triggering biopsy compared to unadjusted categorization or adjustment for PSAD only at decision analysis, from threshold probability ≥ 15%., Conclusion: Adjusting PI-RADSv2.1 categories for a multivariable risk of FP-TB is potentially more effective in triggering TB of index lesions than unadjusted PI-RADS categorization or adjustment for PSAD alone., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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78. Low cancer yield in PI-RADS 3 upgraded to 4 by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI: is it time to reconsider scoring categorization?
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Messina E, Pecoraro M, Laschena L, Bicchetti M, Proietti F, Ciardi A, Leonardo C, Sciarra A, Girometti R, Catalano C, and Panebianco V
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- Male, Humans, Prostate-Specific Antigen, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Contrast Media pharmacology, Image-Guided Biopsy methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate MRI diagnostic performance in detecting clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) in peripheral-zone PI-RADS 4 lesions, comparing those with clearly restricted diffusion (DWI-score 4), and those with equivocal diffusion pattern (DWI-score 3) and positive dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI., Methods: This observational prospective study enrolled 389 men referred to MRI and, if positive (PI-RADS 3 with PSA-density [PSAD] ≥ 0.15 ng/mL/mL, 4 and 5), to MRI-directed biopsy. Lesions with DWI-score 3 and positive DCE were classified as "PI-RADS 3up," instead of PI-RADS 4. Univariable and multivariable analyses were implemented to determine features correlated to csPCa detection., Results: Prevalence of csPCa was 14.5% and 53.3% in PI-RADS categories 3up and 4, respectively (p < 0.001). MRI showed a sensitivity of 100.0%, specificity 40.9%, PPV 46.5%, NPV 100.0%, and accuracy 60.9% for csPCa detection. Modifying the threshold to consider MRI positive and to indicate biopsy (same as previously described, but PI-RADS 3up only when associated with elevated PSAD), the sensitivity changed to 93.9%, specificity 57.2%, PPV 53.0%, NPV 94.8%, and accuracy 69.7%. Age (p < 0.001), PSAD (p < 0.001), positive DWI (p < 0.001), and PI-RADS score (p = 0.04) resulted in independent predictors of csPCa., Conclusions: Most cases of PI-RADS 3up were false-positives, suggesting that upgrading peripheral lesions with DWI-score 3 to PI-RADS 4 because of positive DCE has a detrimental effect on MRI accuracy, decreasing the true prevalence of csPCa in the PI-RADS 4 category. PI-RADS 3up should not be upgraded and directed to biopsy only if associated with increased PSAD., Key Points: • As per PI-RADS v2.1 recommendations, in case of a peripheral zone lesion with equivocal diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI score 3), but positive dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI, the overall PI-RADS score should be upgraded to 4. • The current PI-RADS recommendation of upgrading PI-RADS 3 lesions of the peripheral zone to PI-RADS 4 because of positive DCE decreased clinically significant prostate cancer detection rate in our series. • According to our results, the most accurate threshold for setting indication to prostate biopsy is PI-RADS 3 or PI-RADS 3 with positive DCE both associated with increased PSA density., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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79. An information-oriented paradigm in evaluating accuracy and agreement in radiology.
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Casagrande A, Fabris F, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Radiography, Sensitivity and Specificity, Radiology
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The goal of any radiological diagnostic process is to gain information about the patient's status. However, the mathematical notion of information is usually not adopted to measure the performance of a diagnostic test or the agreement among readers in providing a certain diagnosis. Indeed, commonly used metrics for assessing diagnostic accuracy (e.g., sensitivity and specificity) or inter-reader agreement (Cohen [Formula: see text] statistics) use confusion matrices containing the number of true- and false positives/negatives results of a test, or the number of concordant/discordant categorizations, respectively, thus lacking proper information content. We present a methodological paradigm, based on Shannon's information theory, aiming to measure both accuracy and agreement in diagnostic radiology. This approach models the information flow as a "diagnostic channel" connecting the state of the patient's disease and the radiologist or, in the case of agreement analysis, as an "agreement channel" linking two or more radiologists evaluating the same set of images. For both cases, we proposed some measures, derived from Shannon's mutual information, which can represent an alternative way to express diagnostic accuracy and agreement in radiology.Key points• Diagnostic processes can be modeled with information theory (IT).• IT metrics of diagnostic accuracy are independent from disease prevalence.• IT metrics of inter-reader agreements can overcome Cohen κ pitfalls., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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80. Radiation Recall Pneumonitis Anticipates Bilateral Immune-Induced Pneumonitis in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
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Torresan S, Zussino G, Cortiula F, Follador A, Fasola G, Girometti R, and Cereser L
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Radiation recall pneumonitis (RRP) is a rare inflammatory reaction that occurs in previously irradiated fields, and it may be caused by various triggering agents. Immunotherapy has been reported to potentially be one of these triggers. However, precise mechanisms and specific treatments have not been explored yet due to a lack of data in this setting. Here, we report a case of a patient who received radiation therapy and immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy for non-small cell lung cancer. He developed first radiation recall pneumonitis and subsequently immune-checkpoint inhibitor-induced pneumonitis (IIP). After presenting the case, we discuss the currently available literature on RRP and the challenges of differential diagnosis between RRP, IIP, and other forms of pneumonitis. We believe that this case is of particular clinical value since it highlights the importance of including RRP in a differential diagnosis of lung consolidation during immunotherapy. Furthermore, it suggests that RRP might anticipate more extensive ICI-induced pneumonitis.
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- 2023
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81. Abbreviated Versus Multiparametric Prostate MRI in Active Surveillance for Prostate-Cancer Patients: Comparison of Accuracy and Clinical Utility as a Decisional Tool.
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Zattoni F, Maresca S, Dal Moro F, Bednarova I, Randazzo G, Basso G, Reitano G, Giannarini G, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
- Abstract
(1) Purpose: To compare the diagnostic accuracy between full multiparametric contrast-enhanced prostate MRI (mpMRI) and abbreviated dual-sequence prostate MRI (dsMRI) in men with clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) who were candidates for active surveillance. (2) Materials and Methods: Fifty-four patients with a diagnosis of low-risk PCa in the previous 6 months had a mpMRI scan prior to a saturation biopsy and a subsequent MRI cognitive transperineal targeted biopsy (for PI-RADS ≥ 3 lesions). The dsMRI images were obtained from the mpMRI protocol. The images were selected by a study coordinator and assigned to two readers blinded to the biopsy results (R1 and R2). Inter-reader agreement for clinically significant cancer was evaluated with Cohen's kappa. The dsMRI and mpMRI accuracy was calculated for each reader (R1 and R2). The clinical utility of the dsMRI and mpMRI was investigated with a decision-analysis model. (3) Results: The dsMRI sensitivity and specificity were 83.3%, 31.0%, 75.0%, and 23.8%, respectively, for R1 and R2. The mpMRI sensitivity and specificity were 91.7%, 31.0%, 83.3%, and 23.8%, respectively, for R1 and R2. The inter-reader agreement for the detection of csPCa was moderate (k = 0.53) and good (k = 0.63) for dsMRI and mpMRI, respectively. The AUC values for the dsMRI were 0.77 and 0.62 for the R1 and R2, respectively. The AUC values for the mpMRI were 0.79 and 0.66 for R1 and R2, respectively. No AUC differences were found between the two MRI protocols. At any risk threshold, the mpMRI showed a higher net benefit than the dsMRI for both R1 and R2. (4) Conclusions: The dsMRI and mpMRI showed similar diagnostic accuracy for csPCa in male candidates for active surveillance.
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- 2023
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82. Can a chest HRCT-based crash course on COVID-19 cases make inexperienced thoracic radiologists readily available to face the next pandemic?
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Cereser L, Passarotti E, Tullio A, Patruno V, Monterubbiano L, Apa P, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, Radiologists, Lung diagnostic imaging, COVID-19, Lung Diseases, Interstitial
- Abstract
Objective: To test the inter-reader agreement in assessing lung disease extent, HRCT signs, and Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) categorization between a chest-devoted radiologist (CR) and two HRCT-naïve radiology residents (RR1 and RR2) after the latter attended a COVID-19-based chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) "crash course"., Methods: The course was built by retrospective inclusion of 150 patients who underwent HRCT for COVID-19 pneumonia between November 2020 and January 2021. During a first 10-days-long "training phase", RR1 and RR2 read a pool of 100/150 HRCTs, receiving day-by-day access to CR reports as feedback. In the subsequent 2-days-long "test phase", they were asked to report 50/150 HRCTs with no feedback. Test phase reports of RR1/RR2 were then compared with CR using unweighted or linearly-weighted Cohen's kappa (k) statistic and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC)., Results: We observed almost perfect agreement in assessing disease extent between RR1-CR (k = 0.83, p < 0.001) and RR2-CR (k = 0.88, p < 0.001). The agreement between RR1-CR and RR2-CR on consolidation, crazy paving pattern, organizing pneumonia (OP) pattern, and pulmonary artery (PA) diameter was substantial (k = 0.65 and k = 0.68), moderate (k = 0.42 and k = 0.51), slight (k = 0.10 and k = 0.20), and good-to-excellent (ICC = 0.87 and ICC = 0.91), respectively. The agreement in providing RSNA categorization was moderate for R1 versus CR (k = 0.56) and substantial for R2 versus CR (k = 0.67)., Conclusion: HRCT-naïve readers showed an acceptable overall agreement with CR, supporting the hypothesis that a crash course can be a tool to readily make non-subspecialty radiologists available to cooperate in reading high burden of HRCT examinations during a pandemic/epidemic., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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83. Chest high-resolution computed tomography in primary Sjögren's syndrome: an up-to-date primer for rheumatologists.
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Cereser L, Giovannini I, Caronia G, Zabotti A, De Vita S, Zuiani C, Quartuccio L, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Rheumatologists, Lung diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Retrospective Studies, Sjogren's Syndrome diagnosis, Lung Diseases, Interstitial etiology, Lung Diseases, Interstitial complications
- Abstract
Pulmonary manifestations, including airway involvement and interstitial lung disease, are the most frequent extra-glandular complications of primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS). Chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is a cornerstone of pulmonary diagnostic imaging, aiming to detect, characterise, and quantify such conditions. In patients with pSS-related lung abnormalities, HRCT proved helpful in various clinical scenarios, including baseline and follow-up evaluation, assessment of superimposed infections, suspected progressive interstitial lung diseases, and acute exacerbation. This review aims to provide a primer for rheumatologists on chest HRCT, illustrating the up-to-date technique, imaging findings, and clinical indications in pSS and highlighting the importance of rheumatologist-radiologist constructive collaboration in the clinical management of such patients.
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- 2022
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84. Structured report improves radiology residents' performance in reporting chest high-resolution computed tomography: a study in patients with connective tissue disease.
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Cereser L, Marchesini F, Di Poi E, Quartuccio L, Zabotti A, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Lung, Pulmonary Fibrosis diagnostic imaging, Lung Diseases, Interstitial diagnostic imaging, Connective Tissue Diseases diagnostic imaging, Radiology
- Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate the performance of radiology residents (RRs) when using a dedicated structured report (SR) template for chest HRCT in patients with suspected connective tissue disease-interstitial lung disease (CTD-ILD), compared to the traditional narrative report (NR). METHODS We retrospectively evaluated 50 HRCT exams in patients with suspected CTD-ILD. A chest-devoted radiologist reported all the HRCT exams as the reference standard, pointing out pulmonary fibrosis findings (i.e., honeycombing, traction bronchiectasis, reticulation, and volume loss), presence and pattern of ILD, and possible other diagnoses. We divided four RRs into two groups according to their expertise level. In each group, RRs reported all HRCT examinations alternatively with NR or SR, noting each report's reporting time. The Cohen's Kappa, Wilcoxon, and McNemar tests were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS Regarding the pulmonary fibrosis findings, we found higher agreement between RRs and the reference standard reader when using SR than NR, regardless of their expertise level, except for volume loss.RRs' accuracy for "other diagnosis" was higher when using SR than NR, moving from 0.48 to 0.66 in the novel group (p = 0.035) and from 0.44 to 0.80 in the expertise group (p < 0.001). No differences in accuracy were found between ILD presence and ILD pattern. The reporting time was significantly lower (p = 0.001) when using SR than NR. CONCLUSION SR is of value in increasing the reporting of critical chest HRCT findings in the complex CTD-ILD scenario and should be used early and systematically during the residency.
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- 2022
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85. Update on MR Contrast Agents for Liver Imaging: What to Use and When.
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Kalor A, Girometti R, Maheshwari E, Kierans AS, Pugliesi RA, Buros C, and Furlan A
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- Contrast Media, Gadolinium DTPA, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Contrast-enhanced liver MR imaging is an important diagnostic tool for many different liver diseases with the sensitivity and specificity in diagnosing liver diseases typically far exceeding other imaging modalities. The safety profile of GBCA is excellent with minimal adverse events. Both extracellular and hepatobiliary contrast agents offer unique advantages and potential limitations. ECA is excellent for obtaining high-quality arterial phase imaging and can be particularly useful for the evaluation of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cirrhotic patients. In contrast, hepatobiliary agent (HBA) can help distinguish FNH from adenomas, detect liver metastases, and provide biliary imaging due to their uptake within normal hepatocytes and biliary excretion., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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86. Chest high-resolution computed tomography in patients with connective tissue disease: pulmonary conditions beyond "the usual suspects".
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Cereser L, Passarotti E, De Pellegrin A, Patruno V, Poi ED, Marchesini F, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
- Subjects
- Autoimmune Diseases complications, Autoimmune Diseases diagnostic imaging, Humans, Myositis complications, Myositis diagnostic imaging, Connective Tissue Diseases complications, Connective Tissue Diseases diagnostic imaging, Lung diagnostic imaging, Lung pathology, Lung Diseases, Interstitial complications, Lung Diseases, Interstitial diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Abstract
The term "connective tissue diseases" (CTDs) refers to a heterogeneous group of autoimmune disorders, including systemic sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis, dermatomyositis, antisynthetase syndrome, and mixed connective tissue disease. Chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is the imaging method of choice for evaluating patients with known or suspected CTD-related interstitial lung disease (CTD-ILD), a complication accounting for substantial morbidity and mortality. While specific HRCT patterns and signs of CTD-ILD have been extensively described (hence the designation "the usual suspects"), the knowledge of various, less frequent conditions involving the lungs in patients with CTD would help the radiologist produce a clinically valuable report, thus potentially influencing patient management. This paper aims to provide an up-to-date review of various unusual pulmonary CTD-related conditions the radiologist should be aware of; namely, acute exacerbation of CTD-ILD, CTD-related interstitial lung abnormalities, lung amyloidosis, MALT lymphoma, antisynthetase syndrome, pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis-like lesion, drug-induced ILD, combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema, and pulmonary hypertension. For each condition, the chest HRCT appearance and the key histopathological and clinical features are resumed, helping the radiologist participate actively in the multidisciplinary discussion of complex clinical cases., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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87. Asymptomatic sacroiliitis detected by magnetic resonance enterography in patients with Crohn's disease: prevalence, association with clinical data, and reliability among radiologists in a multicenter study of adult and pediatric population.
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Cereser L, Zancan G, Giovannini I, Cicciò C, Tinazzi I, Variola A, Bramuzzo M, Murru FM, Marino M, Tullio A, De Vita S, Girometti R, and Zabotti A
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- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Radiologists, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Crohn Disease complications, Crohn Disease diagnostic imaging, Crohn Disease epidemiology, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Sacroiliitis complications, Sacroiliitis diagnostic imaging, Sacroiliitis epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Patients with Crohn's disease (CD) usually undergo magnetic resonance enterography (MRE) for evaluating small bowel involvement. Musculoskeletal symptoms are the most frequent extraintestinal manifestation in inflammatory bowel diseases, especially in CD, with sacroiliitis at imaging occurring in about 6-46% of patients and possibly correlating with axial spondyloarthritis. The primary study aim was to assess the prevalence of sacroiliitis in adult and pediatric patients with CD performing an MRE. We also evaluated the inter-rater agreement for MRE sacroiliitis and the association between sacroiliitis and patients' clinical data., Method: We retrospectively identified 100 adult and 30 pediatric patients diagnosed with CD who performed an MRE between December 2012 and May 2020 in three inflammatory bowel disease centers. Two radiologists assessed the prevalence of sacroiliitis at MRE. We evaluated the inter-rater agreement for sacroiliitis with Cohen's kappa and intraclass correlation coefficient statistics and assessed the correlation between sacroiliitis and demographic, clinical, and endoscopic data (Chi-square and Fisher's tests)., Results: The prevalence of sacroiliitis at MRE was 20% in adults and 6.7% in pediatric patients. The inter-rater agreement for sacroiliitis was substantial (k = 0.62, p < 0.001) in the adults and moderate (k = 0.46, p = 0.011) in the pediatric cohort. Age ≥ 50 years and the time between CD diagnosis and MRE (≥ 86.5 months) were significantly associated with sacroiliitis in adult patients (p = 0.049 and p = 0.038, respectively)., Conclusions: Sacroiliitis is a frequent and reliable abnormality at MRE in adult patients with CD, associated with the age of the patients ≥ 50 years and CD duration., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to International League of Associations for Rheumatology (ILAR).)
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- 2022
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88. Diagnostic Accuracy and Observer Agreement of the MRI Prostate Imaging for Recurrence Reporting Assessment Score.
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Pecoraro M, Turkbey B, Purysko AS, Girometti R, Giannarini G, Villeirs G, Roberto M, Catalano C, Padhani AR, Barentsz JO, and Panebianco V
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- Aged, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prostate pathology, Prostatectomy, Retrospective Studies, Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background Prostate cancer local recurrence location and extent must be determined in an accurate and timely manner. Because of the lack of a standardized MRI approach after whole-gland treatment, a panel of international experts recently proposed the Prostate Imaging for Recurrence Reporting (PI-RR) assessment score. Purpose To determine the diagnostic accuracy of PI-RR for detecting local recurrence in patients with biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radiation therapy (RT) or radical prostatectomy (RP) and to evaluate the interreader variability of PI-RR scoring. Materials and Methods This retrospective observational study included patients who underwent multiparametric MRI between September 2016 and May 2021 for BCR after RT or RP. MRI scans were analyzed, and a PI-RR score was assigned independently by four radiologists. The reference standard was defined using histopathologic findings, follow-up imaging, or clinical response to treatment. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and accuracy were calculated to assess PI-RR performance for each reader. The intraclass correlation coefficient was used to determine interreader agreement. Results A total of 100 men were included: 48 patients after RT (median age, 76 years [IQR, 70-82 years]) and 52 patients after RP (median age, 70 years [IQR, 66-74 years]). After RT, with PI-RR of 3 or greater as a cutoff (assigned when recurrence is uncertain), diagnostic performance ranges were 71%-81% sensitivity, 74%-93% specificity, 71%-89% PPV, 79%-86% NPV, and 77%-88% accuracy across the four readers. After RP, with PI-RR of 3 or greater as a cutoff, performance ranges were 59%-83% sensitivity, 87%-100% specificity, 88%-100% PPV, 66%-80% NPV, and 75%-85% accuracy. The intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.87 across the four readers for both the RT and RP groups. Conclusion MRI scoring with the Prostate Imaging for Recurrence Reporting assessment provides structured, reproducible, and accurate evaluation of local recurrence after definitive therapy for prostate cancer. © RSNA, 2022 Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Haider in this issue. An earlier incorrect version appeared online. This article was corrected on May 11, 2022.
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- 2022
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89. A novel pathway to detect muscle-invasive bladder cancer based on integrated clinical features and VI-RADS score on MRI: results of a prospective multicenter study.
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Bicchetti M, Simone G, Giannarini G, Girometti R, Briganti A, Brunocilla E, Cardone G, De Cobelli F, Gaudiano C, Del Giudice F, Flammia S, Leonardo C, Pecoraro M, Schiavina R, Catalano C, and Panebianco V
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- Aged, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neoplasm Invasiveness pathology, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Urinary Bladder, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery
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Purpose: To determine the clinical, pathological, and radiological features, including the Vesical Imaging-Reporting and Data System (VI-RADS) score, independently correlating with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCa), in a multicentric national setting., Method and Materials: Patients with BCa suspicion were offered magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) before trans-urethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT). According to VI-RADS, a cutoff of ≥ 3 or ≥ 4 was assumed to define muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). Trans-urethral resection of the tumor (TURBT) and/or cystectomy reports were compared with preoperative VI-RADS scores to assess accuracy of MRI for discriminating between non-muscle-invasive versus MIBC. Performance was assessed by ROC curve analysis. Two univariable and multivariable logistic regression models were implemented including clinical, pathological, radiological data, and VI-RADS categories to determine the variables with an independent effect on MIBC., Results: A final cohort of 139 patients was enrolled (median age 70 [IQR: 64, 76.5]). MRI showed sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, and accuracy for MIBC diagnosis ranging from 83-93%, 80-92%, 67-81%, 93-96%, and 84-89% for the more experienced readers. The area under the curve (AUC) was 0.95 (0.91-0.99). In the multivariable logistic regression model, the VI-RADS score, using both a cutoff of 3 and 4 (P < .0001), hematuria (P = .007), tumor size (P = .013), and concomitant hydronephrosis (P = .027) were the variables correlating with a bladder cancer staged as ≥ T2. The inter-reader agreement was substantial (k = 0.814)., Conclusions: VI-RADS assessment scoring proved to be an independent predictor of muscle-invasiveness, which might implicate a shift toward a more aggressive selection approach of patients' at high risk of MIBC, according to a novel proposed predictive pathway., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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90. Inter-reader agreement of the Prostate Imaging Quality (PI-QUAL) score: A bicentric study.
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Girometti R, Blandino A, Zichichi C, Cicero G, Cereser L, De Martino M, Isola M, Zuiani C, Ficarra V, Valotto C, Bertolotto M, and Giannarini G
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Prostate diagnostic imaging, Prostate pathology, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
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Purpose: To investigate the inter-reader agreement of the Prostate imaging quality (PI-QUAL) for multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)., Methods: We included 66 men who underwent 1.5 T mpMRI in June 2020-July 2020 in center 1, with no exclusion criteria. mpMRI included multiplanar T2-weighted imaging (T2WI), Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging (DCE). Two readers from center 2 (experience <1000 to >1500 examinations), blinded to clinical history but not to acquisition parameters, independently assessed PI-QUAL qualitative/anatomical items of each mpMRI sequence, final PI-QUAL score (1-5), and the Prostate imaging reporting and data system version 2.1 (PI-RADSv2.1) category of the index lesion. Cohen's kappa statistics (k) or prevalence-adjusted-bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) were used to calculate the inter-reader agreement in assessing the PI-QUAL (1-to-5 scale and 1-2 versus 3 versus 4-5), the diagnostic quality of each mpMRI sequence, qualitative/anatomical items, and PI-RADSv2.1 category., Results: The inter-reader agreement for PI-QUAL category was moderate upon 1-5 scale (k = 0.55; 95%CI 0.39-0.71) or 1-3 scale (k = 0.51; 95%CI 0.29-0.72), with 90.9% examinations categorized PI-QUAL ≥ 3 by readers. The agreement in assessing a sequence as diagnostic was higher for T2WI (k = 0.76) than DCE (PABAK = 0.61) and DWI (k = 0.46), ranging moderate-to-substantial for most of the items. Readers provided comparable PI-RADSv2.1 categorization (k = 0.88 [excellent agreement]; 95%CI 0.81-0.96), with most PI-RADSv2.1 ≥ 3 assignments found in PI-QUAL ≥ 3 examinations (43/46 by reader 1, and 47/47 by reader 2)., Conclusions: The reproducibility of PI-QUAL was moderate. Higher PI-QUAL scores were associated with excellent inter-reader agreement for PI-RADSv2.1 categorization., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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91. Fifty years of Shannon information theory in assessing the accuracy and agreement of diagnostic tests.
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Casagrande A, Fabris F, and Girometti R
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- Humans, COVID-19 diagnosis, Diagnostic Tests, Routine
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Since 1948, Shannon theoretic methods for modeling information have found a wide range of applications in several areas where information plays a key role, which goes well beyond the original scopes for which they have been conceived, namely data compression and error correction over a noisy channel. Among other uses, these methods have been applied in the broad field of medical diagnostics since the 1970s, to quantify diagnostic information, to evaluate diagnostic test performance, but also to be used as technical tools in image processing and registration. This review illustrates the main contributions in assessing the accuracy of diagnostic tests and the agreement between raters, focusing on diagnostic test performance measurements and paired agreement evaluation. This work also presents a recent unified, coherent, and hopefully, final information-theoretical approach to deal with the flows of information involved among the patient, the diagnostic test performed to appraise the state of disease, and the raters who are checking the test results. The approach is assessed by considering two case studies: the first one is related to evaluating extra-prostatic cancers; the second concerns the quality of rapid tests for COVID-19 detection., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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92. Comparison of different thresholds of PSA density for risk stratification of PI-RADSv2.1 categories on prostate MRI.
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Girometti R, Giannarini G, Panebianco V, Maresca S, Cereser L, De Martino M, Pizzolitto S, Pecoraro M, Ficarra V, Zuiani C, and Valotto C
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- Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Humans, Male, Radiology Information Systems, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Sensitivity and Specificity, Image-Guided Biopsy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional, Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prostate-Specific Antigen blood, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
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Objectives: To compare the effect of different PSA density (PSAD) thresholds on the accuracy for clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) of the Prostate Imaging Reporting And Data System v.2.1 (PI-RADSv2.1)., Methods: We retrospectively included 123 biopsy-naïve men who underwent multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) and transperineal mpMRI-targeted and systematic prostate biopsy between April 2019 and October 2020. mpMRI, obtained on a 3.0T magnet with a PI-RADSv2.1-compliant protocol, was read by two radiologists (>1500/>500 mpMRI examinations). csPCa was defined as International Society of Urogenital Pathology grading group ≥2. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to calculate per-index lesion sensitivity, specificity, and area under the curve (AUC) of PI-RADSv.2.1 categories after adjusting for PSAD ≥0.10,≥0.15, and ≥0.20 ng/mL ml
-1 . Per-adjusted category cancer detection rate (CDR) was calculated, and decision analysis performed to compare PSAD-adjusted PI-RADSv.2.1 categories as a biopsy trigger., Results: csPCa prevalence was 43.9%. PSAD-adjustment increased the CDR of PI-RADSv2.1 category 4. Sensitivity/specificity/AUC were 92.6%/53.6%/0.82 for unadjusted PI-RADS, and 85.2%/72.4%/0.84, 62.9%/85.5%/0.83, and 92.4%/53.6%/0.82 when adjusting PI-RADS categories for a 0.10, 0.15, and 0.20 ng/ml ml-1 PSAD threshold, respectively. Triggering biopsy for PI-RADS four lesions and PSAD ≥0.10 ng/mL ml-1 was the strategy with greatest net benefit at 30 and 40% risk probability (0.307 and 0.271, respectively)., Conclusions: PI-RADSv2.1 category four with PSAD ≥0.10 ng/mL ml-1 was the biopsy-triggering cut-off with the highest net benefit in the range of expected prevalence for csPCa., Advances in Knowledge: 0.10 ng/mL ml-1 is the PSAD threshold with higher clinical utility in stratifying the risk for prostate cancer of PI-RADSv.2.1 categories.- Published
- 2022
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93. Magnetic resonance imaging before breast cancer surgery: results of an observational multicenter international prospective analysis (MIPA).
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Sardanelli F, Trimboli RM, Houssami N, Gilbert FJ, Helbich TH, Álvarez Benito M, Balleyguier C, Bazzocchi M, Bult P, Calabrese M, Camps Herrero J, Cartia F, Cassano E, Clauser P, Cozzi A, de Andrade DA, de Lima Docema MF, Depretto C, Dominelli V, Forrai G, Girometti R, Harms SE, Hilborne S, Ienzi R, Lobbes MBI, Losio C, Mann RM, Montemezzi S, Obdeijn IM, Ozcan UA, Pediconi F, Pinker K, Preibsch H, Raya Povedano JL, Sacchetto D, Scaperrotta GP, Schiaffino S, Schlooz M, Szabó BK, Taylor DB, Ulus ÖS, Van Goethem M, Veltman J, Weigel S, Wenkel E, Zuiani C, and Di Leo G
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mastectomy, Mastectomy, Segmental, Middle Aged, Preoperative Care, Young Adult, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Breast Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: Preoperative breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can inform surgical planning but might cause overtreatment by increasing the mastectomy rate. The Multicenter International Prospective Analysis (MIPA) study investigated this controversial issue., Methods: This observational study enrolled women aged 18-80 years with biopsy-proven breast cancer, who underwent MRI in addition to conventional imaging (mammography and/or breast ultrasonography) or conventional imaging alone before surgery as routine practice at 27 centers. Exclusion criteria included planned neoadjuvant therapy, pregnancy, personal history of any cancer, and distant metastases., Results: Of 5896 analyzed patients, 2763 (46.9%) had conventional imaging only (noMRI group), and 3133 (53.1%) underwent MRI that was performed for diagnosis, screening, or unknown purposes in 692/3133 women (22.1%), with preoperative intent in 2441/3133 women (77.9%, MRI group). Patients in the MRI group were younger, had denser breasts, more cancers ≥ 20 mm, and a higher rate of invasive lobular histology than patients who underwent conventional imaging alone (p < 0.001 for all comparisons). Mastectomy was planned based on conventional imaging in 22.4% (MRI group) versus 14.4% (noMRI group) (p < 0.001). The additional planned mastectomy rate in the MRI group was 11.3%. The overall performed first- plus second-line mastectomy rate was 36.3% (MRI group) versus 18.0% (noMRI group) (p < 0.001). In women receiving conserving surgery, MRI group had a significantly lower reoperation rate (8.5% versus 11.7%, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Clinicians requested breast MRI for women with a higher a priori probability of receiving mastectomy. MRI was associated with 11.3% more mastectomies, and with 3.2% fewer reoperations in the breast conservation subgroup., Key Points: • In 19% of patients of the MIPA study, breast MRI was performed for screening or diagnostic purposes. • The current patient selection to preoperative breast MRI implies an 11% increase in mastectomies, counterbalanced by a 3% reduction of the reoperation rate. • Data from the MIPA study can support discussion in tumor boards when preoperative MRI is under consideration and should be shared with patients to achieve informed decision-making., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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94. Safety, patient acceptance and diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound core needle biopsy of parotid or submandibular glands in primary Sjögren's syndrome with suspected salivary gland lymphoma.
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Giovannini I, Lorenzon M, Manfrè V, Zandonella Callegher S, Pegolo E, Zuiani C, Girometti R, Hocevar A, Dejaco C, Luca Q, De Vita S, and Zabotti A
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- Biopsy, Large-Core Needle adverse effects, Humans, Image-Guided Biopsy adverse effects, Parotid Gland pathology, Patient Safety, Salivary Glands pathology, Submandibular Gland pathology, Lymphoma, Sjogren's Syndrome complications, Sjogren's Syndrome diagnosis
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Background: Enlargement of the major salivary glands (SGs) is a major risk factor for B-cell lymphoma among patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS). Ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy (US-guided CNB) could be a novel technique to manage SG enlargement among patients with pSS., Objective: Accordingly, this study's main aim was to evaluate the safety, patient tolerance and diagnostic accuracy of US-guided CNB procedure for patients with pSS with major SG enlargement., Methods: Patients with clinical diagnosis of pSS and a clinical indication for SG biopsy consecutively underwent US-guided CNB between September 2019 and June 2021. These patients were evaluated clinically 1, 2 and 12 weeks after US-guided CNB. Patients were asked to complete a questionnaire about postprocedural complications as well as periprocedural pain, using the Visual Analogue Scale. Complications were categorised as transient (<12 weeks) or persistent (≥12 weeks)., Results: US-guided CNB was performed on 30 major salivary glands (22 parotid glands and 8 submandibular glands). The procedure was well tolerated. Transient complications-such as haematoma, swelling-were observed among 43% of patients, and mean periprocedural pain was low. However, no persistent complications were reported during the study's follow-up period., Conclusion: US-guided CNB represents a novel approach for the management of patients with pSS with SG enlargement. The procedure showed remarkable patient safety and tolerance, allowing adequate glandular sampling and a definite diagnosis for almost all participating patients without long-term complications., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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95. Comparison of multiple abbreviated multiparametric MRI-derived protocols for the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer.
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Cereser L, Giannarini G, Bonato F, Pizzolitto S, Como G, Valotto C, Ficarra V, Dal Moro F, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
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- Humans, Male, Prostate pathology, Prostatectomy, Retrospective Studies, Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
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Background: The aim of this paper was to compare the accuracy of multiple abbreviated multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-derived protocols in detecting clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa)., Methods: One hundred and eight men undergoing staging 3.0T mpMRI with a Prostate Imaging - Reporting and Data System version 2 (PI-RADSv2)-compliant protocol before radical prostatectomy (RP) were retrospectively evaluated. Two readers (R1, R2) independently analyzed mpMRI, assigning a PI-RADSv2 category to each observation as appearing on each examination sequence. A study coordinator assessed final PI-RADSv2 category by combining readers' assignments according to four protocols: short MRI (sMRI) (diffusion-weighted imaging + axial T2-weighted imaging), contrast-enhanced short MRI (cesMRI) (sMRI + dynamic contrast-enhanced [DCE] imaging), biparametric MRI (diffusion-weighted imaging + multiplanar T2-weigthed imaging), and mpMRI. Using RP pathology as the reference standard for csPCa, we calculated the per-lesion cancer detection rate (CDR) and false discovery rate (FDR) for each MRI protocol (cut-off PI-RADSv2 category ≥3), and the per-PI-RADSv2 category prevalence of csPCa and false positives., Results: Pathology after RP found 142 csPCas with median International Society of Urogenital Pathology grade group 2, and stage ≤pT2c in 68.6% of cases. CDR was comparable across the four MRI protocols (74.6% to 75.3% for R1, and 68.3% for R2). FDR was comparable as well (14.4%-14.5% for R1 and 11.1% for R2). sMRI was the minimum protocol equaling mpMRI in terms of CDR, although cesMRI, similarly to mpMRI, was associated with fewer PI-RADSv2 category 3 assignments and higher prevalence of csPCa within PI-RADSv2 category 3 observations (66.7% versus 76.9% for R1, and 100% versus 91.7% for R2, respectively)., Conclusions: Among multiple abbreviated mpMRI-derived protocols, cesMRI was the one equaling mpMRI in terms of csPCa detection and minimizing PI-RADSv2 category 3 assignments.
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- 2022
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96. Lung Ultrasound Signs and Their Correlation With Clinical Symptoms in COVID-19 Pregnant Women: The "PINK-CO" Observational Study.
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Vetrugno L, Sala A, Orso D, Meroi F, Fabbro S, Boero E, Valent F, Cammarota G, Restaino S, Vizzielli G, Girometti R, Merelli M, Tascini C, Bove T, and Driul L
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze the application of lung ultrasound (LUS) diagnostic approach in obstetric patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and compare LUS score and symptoms of the patients., Design: A single-center observational retrospective study from October 31, 2020 to March 31, 2021., Setting: Department of Ob/Gyn at the University-Hospital of Udine, Italy., Participants: Pregnant women with SARS-CoV-2 diagnosed with reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) swab test were subdivided as symptomatic and asymptomatic patients with COVID-19., Exposure: Lung ultrasound evaluation both through initial evaluation upon admission and through serial evaluations., Main Outcome: Reporting LUS findings and LUS score characteristics., Results: Symptomatic patients with COVID-19 showed a higher LUS (median 3.5 vs. 0, p < 0.001). LUS was significantly correlated with COVID-19 biomarkers as C-reactive protein (CPR; p = 0.011), interleukin-6 ( p = 0.013), and pro-adrenomedullin ( p = 0.02), and inversely related to arterial oxygen saturation ( p = 0.004). The most frequent ultrasound findings were focal B lines (14 vs. 2) and the light beam (9 vs. 0)., Conclusion: Lung ultrasound can help to manage pregnant women with SARS-CoV-2 infection during a pandemic surge., Study Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04823234. Registered on March 29, 2021., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Vetrugno, Sala, Orso, Meroi, Fabbro, Boero, Valent, Cammarota, Restaino, Vizzielli, Girometti, Merelli, Tascini, Bove, Driul and the PINK-CO study investigators.)
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- 2022
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97. Pathological outcome of sonographically occult architectural distortions (AD) visible only on digital breast tomosynthesis, and comparison with AD visible also on 2D mammography.
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Linda A, Tarricone R, Londero V, Girometti R, and Zuiani C
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- Biopsy, Needle, Breast diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Image-Guided Biopsy, Retrospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Mammography
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Purpose: To evaluate the rates of malignant and of high-risk lesions among sonographically occult architectural distortions (AD) visible only on digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) and compare them with AD visible on 2D mammography (2D) and DBT., Method: The records of 1104 DBT-vacuum assisted biopsies (DBT-VAB) were retrospectively reviewed and 218 cases of AD were identified. Complete radiologic examinations and pathologic results were available for 113 sonographically occult AD (1 clinically-detected, 112 clinically-occult). 2D and DBT images were reviewed and AD were divided into a "DBT-detected" group (visible on only DBT) and a "2D-detected" group (visible both in 2D and DBT). The rates of malignant and of high-risk lesions in the "DBT-detected" AD group were calculated and compared to those of the "2D-detected" AD group., Results: Thirty-five (31%) of 113 AD were assessed as "DBT-detected", while 78 (69%) as "2D-detected". DBT-VAB results were benign lesions in 63 (56%) AD, high-risk lesions in 32 (28%) AD and malignant lesions in 18 (16%) AD. Four (12.5%) high-risk lesions were upgraded to malignancy at surgery. Based on final pathology, the malignancy rate was significantly higher in the "DBT-detected" group than the "2D-detected" group (34% [12/35 cases] vs 13% [10/78]; p < 0.05). The high-risk lesion rates were 32% (11/35 cases) in the "DBT-detected" group and 22% (17/78 cases) in the "2D-detected" group (p > 0.05)., Conclusions: AD visible on only DBT proved to be malignant in about one third of cases, which exceeded the malignancy rate of AD visible on also 2D. A similar proportion of DBT-only AD was represented by high-risk lesions., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2022
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98. Role of contrast-enhanced ultrasound in assessing indeterminate renal lesions and Bosniak ≥2F complex renal cysts found incidentally on CT or MRI.
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Como G, Valotto C, Tulipano Di Franco F, Giannarini G, Cereser L, Girometti R, and Zuiani C
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Kidney diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Contrast Media, Image Enhancement methods, Kidney Diseases, Cystic diagnostic imaging, Kidney Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Ultrasonography methods
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Objective: To investigate the impact of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in reclassifying incidental renal findings categorized as indeterminate lesions (IL) or Bosniak ≥ 2F complex renal cysts (CRC) on CT or MRI., Methods: We retrospectively included 44 subjects who underwent CEUS between 2016 and 2019 to assess 48 IL ( n = 12) and CRC ( n = 36) incidentally found on CT or MRI. CEUS was performed by one radiologist with 10 year of experience with a sulfur hexafluoride-filled microbubble contrast agent. The same radiologist, blinded to clinical information and previous CT/MRIs, retrospectively reviewed CEUS images/videos, categorizing renal findings with Bosniak-derived imaging categories ranging from 0 (indeterminate) to 5 (solid lesion). CEUS-related reclassification rate was calculated (proportion of IL reclassified with an imaging category >0, or CRC reclassified below or above imaging category >2F). Using histological examination or a ≥ 24 months follow-up as the standard of reference, we also estimated per-lesion sensitivity/specificity for malignancy., Results: CEUS reclassified 24/48 findings (50.0%; 95% C.I. 35.2-64.7), including 12/12 IL (100%; 95% CI 73.5-100) and 12/36 CRC (33.3%; 95% C.I. 18.5-50.9), mostly above category >2F (66.7%). CEUS and CT/MRI showed 96.0% (95%CI 79.7-99.9) vs 44.0% (95%CI 24.4-65.1) sensitivity, and 82.6% (95%CI 61.2-95.1) vs 60.9% (95%CI 38.5-80.3%) specificity., Conclusion: CEUS provided substantial and accurate reclassification of CT/MRI incidental findings., Advances in Knowledge: Previous studies included Bosniak 2 incidental findings, thus possibly underestimating CEUS-induced reclassification rates. Using a more meaningful cut-off (Bosniak ≥2F), problem-solving CEUS was effective as well, with higher reclassification rates for CRC than in literature.
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- 2021
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99. Multireader comparison of contrast-enhanced mammography versus the combination of digital mammography and digital breast tomosynthesis in the preoperative assessment of breast cancer.
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Girometti R, Linda A, Conte P, Lorenzon M, De Serio I, Jerman K, Londero V, and Zuiani C
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, Preoperative Period, Radiographic Image Enhancement, Retrospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Contrast Media, Mammography methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare preoperative contrast-enhanced spectral mammography (CEM) versus digital mammography plus digital breast tomosynthesis (DM + DBT) in detecting breast cancer (BC) and assessing its size., Material and Methods: We retrospectively included 78 patients with histological diagnosis of BC who underwent preoperative DM, DBT, and CEM over one year. Four readers, blinded to pathology and clinical information, independently evaluated DM + DBT versus CEM to detect BC and measure its size. Readers' experience ranged 3-10 years. We calculated the per-lesion cancer detection rate (CDR) and the complement of positive predictive value (1-PPV) of both methods, stratifying analysis on the total of lesions, index lesions, and additional lesions. The agreement in assessing cancer size versus pathology was assessed with Bland-Altman analysis., Results: 100 invasive BCs (78 index lesions and 22 additional lesions) were analyzed. Compared to DM + DBT, CEM showed higher overall CDR in less experienced readers (range 0.85-0.90 vs. 0.95-0.96), and higher CDR for additional lesions, regardless of the reader (range 0.54-0.68 vs. 0.77-0.86). CEM increased the detection of additional disease in dense breasts in all readers and non-dense breasts in less experienced readers only. The 1-PPV of CEM (range 0.10-0.18) was comparable to that of DM + DBT (range 0.09-0.19). At Bland-Altman analysis, DM + DBT and CEM showed comparable mean differences and limits of agreement in respect of pathologic cancer size., Conclusion: Preoperative CEM improved the detection of additional cancer lesions compared to DM + DBT, particularly in dense breasts. CEM and DM + DBT achieved comparable performance in cancer size assessment., (© 2021. Italian Society of Medical Radiology.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Magnetic resonance imaging assessment of ASAS-defined active sacroiliitis in patients with inflammatory back pain and suspected axial spondyloarthritis: a study of reliability.
- Author
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Cereser L, Zabotti A, Zancan G, Quartuccio L, Cicciò C, Giovannini I, De Vita S, Zuiani C, and Girometti R
- Subjects
- Back Pain diagnostic imaging, Back Pain etiology, Cohort Studies, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Sacroiliac Joint diagnostic imaging, Sacroiliitis diagnostic imaging, Spondylarthritis complications, Spondylarthritis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objectives: The main purpose was to investigate the intra- and inter-rater reliability of the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS) definition of positive MRI for active sacroiliitis (ASAS-positive MRI), in a sample of patients with inflammatory back pain (IBP) and suspected axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA), who underwent sacroiliac joints (SIJ) MRI. We also evaluated the intra- and inter-rater reliability for the detection of the recently ASAS-refined findings indicating inflammatory activity., Methods: We retrospectively identified 105 consecutive patients with IBP and suspected axSpA who underwent SIJ MRI. Two radiologists in two distinct reading sessions assessed the prevalence of ASAS-positive MRI and of ASAS-defined signs of inflammatory activity. We determined the intra-rater and inter-rater reliability of the above-mentioned variables by means of prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) statistic, and verified whether there was any significant difference in providing the diagnosis of ASAS-positive MRI on an inter-rater basis (McNemar test)., Results: We observed substantial reliability in assessing a SIJ MRI as ASAS-positive both on intra-rater basis (PABAK ranging 0.70-0.77) and inter-rater basis (PABAK 0.71 for the first reading, and 0.64 for the second reading). No significant difference in the rate of diagnosis between raters was found (p>0.99 for both reading sets). Intra-rater and inter-rater reliability for inflammatory activity signs ranged from moderate to almost perfect., Conclusions: The substantial intra- and inter-rater reliability in assessing the ASAS-positive MRI supports its use for classification purposes. The variable reliability of inflammatory activity signs suggests they are suboptimal as a complement to the current definition of ASAS-positive MRI.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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