Automated Image System for Scoring Changes in Quantitative Interstitial Lung Disease
- Technology Benefits
- Increased accuracy, sensitivity and consistency over visual scoringFacilitating drug evaluation process with more rapid assessment, lower cost, and shortened clinical trialsDe-noising technique for multi-center trials
- Technology Application
- Assess degree of interstitial lung diseaseRoutine monitoring of lung functionMonitor lung function in clinical trials
- Detailed Technology Description
- Professor Hyun Kim and colleagues from UCLA’s Department of Radiology have developed a new, fully-automated Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) scoring system that provides quantitative, repeatable, and retraceable measures of interstitial lung disease (ILD). The system provides increased sensitivity and consistency over visual scoring and can reliably estimate transitional changes in the levels of fibrotic reticulation, ground glass patterns, and normal, healthy patterns. The system also includes a de-nosing technique for a reduction in image variation from multi-center trials, which has been a significant improvement over existing quantitative scoring. Overall, this technology combines the de-nosing technique, robust feature selection, model classification and artificial intelligence of a computer-aid diagnosis system to calculate ILD quantitative metric.
- Others
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State Of Development
The system is implemented as computer software. This software can be run on individual medical imaging workstation or at the image acquisition device or on a reading workstation. The software could also be run on a centralized server or cluster servers. This software can also be accessed remotely (via the internet).
Background
Increasing evidence supports that the extent of interstitial lung disease (ILD) is an important predictor of prognosis for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and scleroderma. The median survival of IPF patients is 2-5 years. In U.S., about 100,000 people are affected by IPF and 30,000 new cases are diagnosed every year. Currently, high resolution CT (HRCT) is the best mode of investigation to diagnosis ILD. The visual semi-quantitative scoring is the prevalent standard to evaluate ILD on HRCT. However, semi-quantitative scoring systems are limited by the requirement of expert radiologists and by inter-observer variation, so they tend to be subjective and unreliable for assessing changes in disease status. Development of computer-based scoring systems offers the potential of reducing reader variation and standardizing data across multiple sites. However, such quantitative scoring methods have not yet been developed to estimate the transitional change in the multi-levels of fibrotic reticulation, ground glass and normal patterns for testing treatment efficacy in ILD. Related Materials
Tech ID/UC Case
23503/2013-078-0
Related Cases
2013-078-0
- *Abstract
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None
- *Principal Investigator
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Name: Matthew Brown
Department:
Name: Jonathan Gerald Goldin
Department:
Name: Hyun Kim
Department:
- Country/Region
- USA
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