Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate whether, and to which extent, experienced radiologists are able to visually correctly differentiate transient from persistent subsolid nodules from a single CT examination alone and to determine CT morphological features to make this differentiation.Materials and methodsWe selected 86 transient and 135 persistent subsolid nodules from the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) database. Four experienced radiologists visually assessed a predefined list of morphological features and gave a final judgment on a continuous scale (0–100). To assess observer performance, area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was calculated. Statistical differences of morphological features between transient and persistent lesions were calculated using Chi-square. Inter-observer agreement of morphological features was evaluated by percentage agreement.ResultsForty-nine lesions were excluded by at least 2 observers, leaving 172 lesions for analysis. On average observers were able to differentiate transient from persistent subsolid nodules ≥ 10 mm with an area under the curve of 0.75 (95% CI 0.67–0.82). Nodule type, lesion margin, presence of a well-defined border, and pleural retraction showed significant differences between transient and persistent lesions in two observers. Average pair-wise percentage agreement for these features was 81%, 64%, 47% and 89% respectively. Agreement for other morphological features varied from 53% to 95%.ConclusionThe visual capacity of experienced radiologists to differentiate persistent and transient subsolid nodules is moderate in subsolid nodules larger than 10 mm. Performance of the visual assessment of CT morphology alone is not sufficient to generally abandon a short-term follow-up for subsolid nodules.

Highlights

  • On average observers were able to differentiate transient from persistent subsolid nodules ! 10 mm with an area under the curve of 0.75

  • The visual capacity of experienced radiologists to differentiate persistent and transient subsolid nodules is moderate in subsolid nodules larger than 10 mm

  • Results of lung cancer screening Computed Tomography (CT) studies revealed the importance of subsolid nodules as potential early adenocarcinomas

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Results of lung cancer screening Computed Tomography (CT) studies revealed the importance of subsolid nodules as potential early adenocarcinomas. In the Early Lung Cancer Action Project (ELCAP) study the prevalence of subsolid nodules was found to be lower compared to solid nodules. Another study evaluating a group of clinically and screen-detected lesions even reported 81% (43/53) of resected subsolid nodules to be (pre)malignant [2]. The most frequent benign disease causing subsolid nodules is a focal infection [3, 4]. Differentiation of transience versus persistence of subsolid nodules represents the first diagnostic task to discriminate between benign and potentially malignant lesions, and a short-term three months follow-up has been recommended by the Fleischner Society and the British Thoracic Society [7, 8]. Previous studies on this subject evaluated the contribution of texture analysis and clinical features, but did not assess human observer performance [11,12,13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call