Richard Wiggins, MD
University of Utah
School of Medicine
Dr. Wiggins leads SIIM 2007
Hot Topic session on PACS/RIS Replacement
SIIM 2007 Workflow Demo:
Khan Siddiqui,MD
VA Maryland Health
Care System
Dr. Siddiqui introduces the live workflow session.
This session
addressed workflow issues that have arisen due to rapid
adaptation of advanced and new imaging techniques, such as
multi-detector CT, PET/CT, and Cardiac CT/MR imaging. In the
session, presenters will highlight current challenges to the
interpretation process as seen in today’s clinical workflow by
demonstrating case interpretation live during the session. The
cases will illustrate how current workflow scenarios are not yet
addressing and incorporating these new techniques.
Drs. Eliot Siegel and Kathirkamanthan
Shanmuganathan
participate in the workflow demonstration
Three different
workflow scenarios – trauma, cardiology, and nuclear medicine –
were presented, each highlighting a new workflow challenge.
Trauma
In the trauma cases, issues of rapid interpretation and working
quickly with images from differing sources were addressed. Dr.
Kathirkamanthan Shanmuganathan presented two cases and show how
the speed at which an emergency situation is addressed has a
huge impact on how and when a patient is treated. The more big
studies that are done – such as full-body CT scans and others
that are becoming more and more common with newly available
technologies – the longer time it takes to get and interpret the
images, which can delay patient treatment. A second trauma case
illustrated challenges faced when two patients are involved in
the same incident.
Cardio
Cases addressing cardiology workflow pointed out the need for
system integration and the potential problems when cardio PACS
and radiology PACS do not interact. With all of the new hybrid
systems in use – Cardiac CT/MR, Echocardio Ultrasound, etc. –
there is still no good system that will allow both cardiologists
and radiologists to read all images. Dr. Anwer Quershi
showed through his live workflow demo how going back and forth
to various workstations and the use of different equipment is
disruptive and slows treatment.
Nuclear Medicine
This was the biggest challenge area of the three workflow
scenarios presented during the general session: integrating
nuclear medicine interpretations into PACS. The resulting data
from nuclear medicine tests requires post-processing tools that
are not available on PACS; until recently, you couldn’t even
send nuclear medicine images to PACS. Dr. Eliot Siegel presented
nuclear medicine scenarios and demonstrated that these
interpretations require a dedicated/proprietary nuclear medicine
workstation.
SIIM Reception
The SIIM 2007 Reception was held at the
Providence WaterFire. Attendees enjoyed dessert and coffee and the
award winning WaterFire, involving fire sculptures set to music along
the Providence River Walk.
The Society for Imaging
Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) welcomed the newest members of the
College of SIIM Fellows today. They are:
Katherine P. Andriole,
PhD
David W. Piraino, MD
Rangaraj Rangayyan,
PhD
The three were introduced
by Steve Horii, MD, president of the College of SIIM Fellows, during the
Society’s annual business meeting today in conjunction with its Annual
Meeting in Providence, R.I.
Katherine Andriole has
been an early implementer of Computed Radiography, an effective educator
across multiple groups, and she has been instrumental in helping to
define the field of Medical Imaging Informatics. She has been involved
in biomedical imaging informatics for more than 20 years carrying out
research, teaching and clinical service and administrative activities.
Dr. Andriole is Associate Professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical
School and Assistant Medical Director, Imaging IT, and Director of
Imaging Informatics for the Center for Evidence-Based Imaging at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School.
David Piraino’s contributions to imaging informatics include work on RIS-driven
workflow, standard implementation and IHE, and digital bone imaging. Dr.
Piraino is Section Head of Computers in Radiology at the Cleveland
Clinic. He was one of the early organizers of RISC (the Radiology
Information Systems Consortium, SCAR’s and SIIM’s predecessor) and was
Chair of the organization during the year that RISC and SCAR merged. He
currently serves on the SIIM Board of Directors.
Rangaraj (Raj) Rangayyan’s contributions to the field include work in
developing techniques for computer-aided diagnosis of breast cancer,
segmentation and analysis of neuroblastoma, and restoration of nuclear
medicine images. He has an extensive background in the engineering and
physics of imaging and has made numerous original contributions to the
fields of biomedical signal and image analysis, medical imaging, and
computer-assisted radiology. He is Professor in the Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering and Adjunct Professor, Departments
of Surgery and Radiology, at the University of Calgary.
SIIM 2007 Awards and Elections
The Journal of Digital Imaging, the
peer-reviewed, scientific journal of the Society for Imaging Informatics
in Medicine, announced its Best Paper and Best Reviewer Awards for 2006
(Volume 19) today at its Annual Meeting in Providence, R.I.
JDI Editor-in-Chief Janice Honeyman-Buck, PhD, presented the awards
during the society’s annual business meeting. The recipients are:
Best Paper:
Paras Lakhani, MD
“Development and Validation of Queries
Using Structured Query Language (SQL) to Determine the Utilization of
Comparison Imaging in Radiology Reports Stored on PACS,” by Paras Lakhani,
MD; Elliot D. Menschik, MD, PhD; Alberto F. Goldszal, PhD;
Joseph P. Murray, MS; Mark G. Weiner, MD; Curtis P. Langlotz, MD, PhD;
Vol. 19:1
Best Paper, Second Place:
Stefan Wesarg
“Localizing Calcifications in Cardiac
CT Data Sets Using a New Vessel Segmentation Approach,” by Stefan Wesarg,
M. Fawad Khan, and Evelyn A. Firle; Vol. 19:3
The Reviewer of the Year awards are
presented to the reviewer judged to have contributed the most to the
peer review process of the journal in 2006. Recipients are:
First Place: Elizabeth Krupinski, PhD, University of Arizona
Second Place: Chris L. Sistrom, MD, MPH
Dr. Janice Honeyman-Buck acknowledges JDI Associate
Editors: Kathy Andriole, Steve Horii, and Elizabeth Krupinski