1 / 29

Robotic Telepathology: Practical Applications

Robotic Telepathology: Practical Applications. Bruce E. Dunn, M.D. Chief Pathologist, Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN) 12 Professor and Vice-Chair, Dept of Pathology, Medical College of Wisconsin. Conflict-of-interest statement.

norman
Download Presentation

Robotic Telepathology: Practical Applications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Robotic Telepathology: Practical Applications Bruce E. Dunn, M.D. Chief Pathologist, Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN) 12 Professor and Vice-Chair, Dept of Pathology, Medical College of Wisconsin

  2. Conflict-of-interest statement Bruce E. Dunn, MD has no financial interest in any commercially-available telepathology system

  3. 21 Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs)

  4. Hospitals and CBOCs in VISN 12

  5. Robotic Telepathology (TP) at Iron Mtn • Iron Mountain is an active, rural DVA hospital with a general surgery program • 1000 - 1500 surgical pathology cases per year • Occasional frozen sections requested • 1996: part-time Iron Mountain pathologist retired • Full implementation of commercial hybrid dynamic store/forward system operated by two senior pathologists in Milwaukee • Feasibility study performed - published in 1997

  6. Three Phases of Robotic TP at Iron Mtn • Phase I: mid-1996 – early 1999 • Two senior surgical pathologists exclusively read cases with extensive documentation • 2,200 cases available for TP • Summary published in 1999 • Phase II: early 1999 – end of 2004 • One senior pathologist retired; three junior pathologists hired • Consolidation in VISN resulted in increased AP workload • 5,841 cases available for TP • Phase III: 2005 – present (through July 2006) • One original senior pathologist and two new pathologists • ASAP ImagingTM implemented • 2,015 cases available for TP through July 2006

  7. Objectives • Compare rates of case deferral and major TP discordance with light microscopy (LM) among seven pathologists during three phases of robotic telepathology • Compare rates of major discordance before and after implementing the ASAP ImagingTM system

  8. Summary of Cases (1999) Organ/system Percent of total Gastrointestinal 42.9 Skin 27.5 Prostate 10.2 Hernia sac 3.8 Urinary bladder 2.6 Bone/synovium/tendon 2.1 Penis/testis/spermatic cord 1.9 Gallbladder 1.3 Extremity amputation 1.1 Appendix 0.5 Gynecologic 0.5 Breast 0.3 Miscellaneous 5.2

  9. Technical Aspects of Workflow • Tissue grossed in Iron Mtn by experienced PA (tele-gross imaging available) • Slides processed by Iron Mtn histotechnician • Telepathology systems “linked up” • PA places slides onto stage in Iron Mtn • Pathologist controls robotic microscope remotely from Milwaukee

  10. Current and Future

  11. Robotic Microscopy • Commercial hybrid dynamic store/forward system • Olympus microscope with motorized stage, objectives, lighting control • CODEC used for gross & microscopic imaging and videoconferencing • 4x,10x, 20x 40x 100 (oil free) objectives • Dynamic imaging: 350 x 288 x 24-bit color • Static imaging: 1520 x 1144 x 24-bit color • Images transmitted at 768 kbps over WAN • 2005: ASAP ImagingTM enables remote access with live streaming imaging

  12. VISN 12 Telepathology Network NRM Iron Mtn RM Tomah Iron Mtn Tomah DR GS POP POP DR NRM Milwaukee Madison Milw Madison DR Interface to HIS POP POP WAN NRM Westside Hines Micro Multi-site conferencing N. Chicago DR POP POP Dedicated Server NRM NRM Hines North Chicago GS Hines Chicago GS POP POP DR KEY POP – point of presence VistA – VA computerized patient record system VHA WAN Internet VHA WAN Internet

  13. Current and Future

  14. Methods • Each of 7 pathologists read cases by TP, completed reports where appropriate, then read same cases by LM • Over 50% of cases read by second pathologist by LM • Revised reports generated based on LM diagnosis, if necessary, and clinician notified • Reasons for case deferral to LM documented • Pathologist-specific rates of deferral and discordance determined • Notes: • TURP and bone marrow cases deferred automatically • Gastric biopsies reviewed for H. pylori-like organisms by PA in Iron Mtn by LM

  15. Current and Future Non-Robotic Telepathology System

  16. Deferral to Light Microscopy • Reasons for deferral: case difficulty, need for consultation, special or immuno stains, “short staffing” • If case referred to Milwaukee due to computer unavailability (malfunction or upgrade), or the assigned pathologist was not yet competent to use telepathology, then case not counted as a deferral

  17. Discordance Rates by Pathologist • Deferred cases not included • Major discordance • Benign versus malignant • Different patient outcome or therapy • Report modified and clinician called

  18. Phase I Individual Summaries Pathologist A B Total Total opportunities 1121 1079 2200 No. deferred 34 22 56 Deferral rate (%) 3.0 2.0 2.5 TP cases 1087 1057 2144 Maj discord 5 2 7 Discordance (%) 0.46 0.19 0.33

  19. Phase II Individual Summaries Pathologist B C D E Total Total opportunities 2231 1582 1031 997 5841 No. deferred 319 290 270 326 1205 Defer rate (%) 14.3 18.3 26.2 32.7 20.6 TP cases 1912 1292 761 671 4636 Maj discord 7 5 8 1 21 Discordance (%) 0.37 0.39 1.05 0.15 0.45

  20. Phase III Individual Summaries (ASAP) (July 2006) Pathologist B D E F G Total Total opportunities 795 17 185 683 335 2015 No. deferred 40 0 12 78 65 195 Deferral rate (%) 5.0 0 6.5 11.4 19.4 9.7 TP cases 755 17 173 605 270 1820 Maj discord 1 0 0 2 1 4 Discordance (%) 0.13 0 0 0.33 0.37 0.22

  21. Comparison by Phase (July 2006) Phase I II III Total Total opportunities 2,200 5,841 2,015 10,056 No. deferred 56 1,205 195 1,456 Deferral rate (%) 2.5 20.6 9.7 14.5 TP cases 2,144 4,636 1,820 8,600 Maj discord 7 21 4 32 Discordance (%) 0.33 0.45 0.22 0.37

  22. Pathologist B: Major concordance rate (N=3,724)(July 2006)

  23. Pathologist-Specific Discordance Rates

  24. Major Discordance Rate by Technology(July 2006) Pathologist Technology B E All Pre-ASAP 0.30 0.15 0.41* ASAP 0.13 0 0.22 *0.33 excluding pathologist D

  25. Summary • Pathologist-specific discordance rates ranged from 0.12% to 1.03%, with median of 0.37% and overall rate of 0.37% • Despite extensive experience of one senior pathologist, occasional discordances continue to occur • The rates of discordance using ASAP ImagingTM are lower that those observed previously • All TP cases continue to be reviewed by LM

  26. References • Dunn, B.E., U.A. Almagro, H. Choi, N.K. Sheth, J.S. Arnold, D.L.Recla, E.A. Krupinski, A.R. Graham and R.S. Weinstein. 1997. Dynamic-robotic telepathology: Department of Veterans Affairs feasibility study. Human Pathol. 28:8-1. • Dunn, B.E., H. Choi, U.A. Almagro, D.L. Recla, and R.S. Weinstein. 1999. Routine surgical telepathology in the Department of Veterans Affairs: Experience-related improvements in pathologist performance in 2200 cases. Telemed J. 5:323-337.

More Related