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1.
Healthcare (Basel) ; 12(7)2024 Mar 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38610129

RESUMEN

This retrospective study evaluated a commercial deep learning (DL) software for chest radiographs and explored its performance in different scenarios. A total of 477 patients (284 male, 193 female, mean age 61.4 (44.7-78.1) years) were included. For the reference standard, two radiologists performed independent readings on seven diseases, thus reporting 226 findings in 167 patients. An autonomous DL reading was performed separately and evaluated against the gold standard regarding accuracy, sensitivity and specificity using ROC analysis. The overall average AUC was 0.84 (95%-CI 0.76-0.92) with an optimized DL sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 75.4%. The best results were seen in pleural effusion with an AUC of 0.92 (0.885-0.955) and sensitivity and specificity of each 86.4%. The data also showed a significant influence of sex, age, and comorbidity on the level of agreement between gold standard and DL reading. About 40% of cases could be ruled out correctly when screening for only one specific disease with a sensitivity above 95% in the exploratory analysis. For the combined reading of all abnormalities at once, only marginal workload reduction could be achieved due to insufficient specificity. DL applications like this one bear the prospect of autonomous comprehensive reporting on chest radiographs but for now require human supervision. Radiologists need to consider possible bias in certain patient groups, e.g., elderly and women. By adjusting their threshold values, commercial DL applications could already be deployed for a variety of tasks, e.g., ruling out certain conditions in screening scenarios and offering high potential for workload reduction.

2.
Diseases ; 11(3)2023 Aug 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37754304

RESUMEN

An aneurysmal fibrous histiocytoma is a rare cutaneous soft-tissue tumour which accounts for approximately 0.06% of all dermatopathologies. Metastasis is exceedingly uncommon, to the point that there have only been eight reported cases in the scientific literature. We present the case of a 25-year-old male with a primary aneurysmal fibrous histiocytoma located in the nuchal region which exhibited rapid growth and abrupt ulceration over a short time span and showed signs of locoregional aggressive infiltration. A subsequent histopathological analysis confirmed the presence of diffuse solid and cystic pulmonary metastases. Further genetic sequencing verified LAMTOR1-PRKCD fusion. This case report seeks to review the existing literature on aneurysmal fibrous histiocytoma, discuss the challenges of differential diagnosis and propose standardised diagnostic criteria.

3.
Tomography ; 9(5): 1638-1648, 2023 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37736984

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Hyperthermic ablation is a minimally invasive mode of tumour therapy which serves as a viable alternative to surgical intervention. However, one of the major drawbacks, besides the heat sink effect and the risk of damaging adjacent organs, is limited ablation size. The use of a cooling fluid during ablation has been shown to increase the ablation volume and decrease the carbonisation rate. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the composition of the cooling fluid has an effect on ablation size and carbonisation rate during hepatic laser ablation in an ex vivo bovine setting. METHOD: In this study bovine hepatic tissue was ablated in an ex vivo setting using an internally cooled laser applicator. A total of 45 tissue samples were assigned to three groups: 0.9% saline infusion (n = 15), distilled water infusion (n = 15) and a 50%/50% mixture of 0.9% saline and distilled water (n = 15). Ablation was conducted using a 1064 nm Nd:YAG laser at a wattage of 25 W and time interval of 10 min. The ablation volume and carbonisation rate were then measured and recorded through postprocedural MRI. One-way ANOVA and post-hoc testing were performed to assess the effect of the cooling fluid composition on the ablation volumes. RESULTS: We found that using a mixture of saline and distilled water as a cooling fluid during hyperthermic ablation resulted in a larger ablation volume (mean ± SD: 22.64 ± 0.99 cm3) when compared to saline infusion (21.08 ± 1.11 cm3) or distilled water infusion (20.92 ± 0.92 cm3). This difference was highly significant (p < 0.001). There was no significant difference in ablation size between the saline group and the distilled water group. The highest carbonisation rate occurred in the saline group (12/15), followed by the mixed infusion group (3/15) and the distilled water group (1/15). CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that cooling fluid composition during hepatic laser ablation affects ablation volume in an ex vivo bovine setting. There was no statistically significant difference when comparing ablation volumes during saline infusion and distilled water infusion, but the carbonisation rate was significantly higher when using saline. The combination of saline and distilled water in a 50%/50% mixture as cooling fluid appears to be an auspicious alternative, as ablation volumes created with it are larger when compared to saline and distilled water alone, while carbonisation rate remains low. This might improve patient outcome as well as patient eligibility for hyperthermic ablation.


Asunto(s)
Terapia por Láser , Solución Salina , Bovinos , Animales , Humanos , Hígado/diagnóstico por imagen , Hígado/cirugía , Análisis de Varianza , Agua
4.
Biomedicines ; 11(2)2023 Feb 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36831111

RESUMEN

Thermal ablation offers a minimally invasive alternative in the treatment of hepatic tumours. Several types of ablation are utilised with different methods and indications. However, to this day, ablation size remains limited due to the formation of a central non-conductive boundary layer. In thermal ablation, this boundary layer is formed by carbonisation. Our goal was to prevent or delay carbonisation, and subsequently increase ablation size. We used bovine liver to compare ablation diameter and volume, created by a stand-alone laser applicator, with those created when utilising a spacer between laser applicator and hepatic tissue. Two spacer variants were developed: one with a closed circulation of cooling fluid and one with an open circulation into hepatic tissue. We found that the presence of a spacer significantly increased ablation volume up to 75.3 cm3, an increase of a factor of 3.19 (closed spacer) and 3.02 (open spacer) when compared to the stand-alone applicator. Statistical significance between spacer variants was also present, with the closed spacer producing a significantly larger ablation volume (p < 0.001, MDiff = 3.053, 95% CI[1.612, 4.493]) and diameter (p < 0.001, MDiff = 4.467, 95% CI[2.648, 6.285]) than the open spacer. We conclude that the presence of a spacer has the potential to increase ablation size.

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