4.7 Article

Computer-aided detection (CAD) of lung nodules in CT scans: radiologist performance and reading time with incremental CAD assistance

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages 549-557

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-009-1596-y

Keywords

Multidetector-row computed tomography; MDCT; Computer-aided detection; CAD; Pulmonary nodules; Diagnostic performance

Funding

  1. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R01CA109089] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA109089, R01 CA109089-01A1, R01 CA109089-04, R01 CA109089-02, R01 CA109089-03] Funding Source: Medline

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The diagnostic performance of radiologists using incremental CAD assistance for lung nodule detection on CT and their temporal variation in performance during CAD evaluation was assessed. CAD was applied to 20 chest multidetector-row computed tomography (MDCT) scans containing 190 non-calcified a parts per thousand yen3-mm nodules. After free search, three radiologists independently evaluated a maximum of up to 50 CAD detections/patient. Multiple free-response ROC curves were generated for free search and successive CAD evaluation, by incrementally adding CAD detections one at a time to the radiologists' performance. The sensitivity for free search was 53% (range, 44%-59%) at 1.15 false positives (FP)/patient and increased with CAD to 69% (range, 59-82%) at 1.45 FP/patient. CAD evaluation initially resulted in a sharp rise in sensitivity of 14% with a minimal increase in FP over a time period of 100 s, followed by flattening of the sensitivity increase to only 2%. This transition resulted from a greater prevalence of true positive (TP) versus FP detections at early CAD evaluation and not by a temporal change in readers' performance. The time spent for TP (9.5 s +/- 4.5 s) and false negative (FN) (8.4 s +/- 6.7 s) detections was similar; FP decisions took two- to three-times longer (14.4 s +/- 8.7 s) than true negative (TN) decisions (4.7 s +/- 1.3 s). When CAD output is ordered by CAD score, an initial period of rapid performance improvement slows significantly over time because of non-uniformity in the distribution of TP CAD output and not to a changing reader performance over time.

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