Preparing a collection of radiology examinations for distribution and retrieval
National Institutes of Health · National Center for Biotechnology Information · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Clinical documents made available for secondary use play an increasingly important role in discovery of clinical knowledge, development of research methods, and education. An important step in facilitating secondary use of clinical document collections is easy access to descriptions and samples that represent the content of the collections. This paper presents an approach to developing a collection of radiology examinations, including both the images and radiologist narrative reports, and making them publicly available in a searchable database.
The authors collected 3996 radiology reports from the Indiana Network for Patient Care and 8121 associated images from the hospitals' picture archiving systems. The images and reports were de-identified automatically and then the automatic de-identification was manually verified. The authors coded the key findings of the reports and empirically assessed the benefits of manual coding on retrieval.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
8- DDDina Demner‐FushmanCorresponding
National Institutes of Health, National Center for Biotechnology Information
- MKMarc Kohli
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
- MBMarc B. Rosenman
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
- SESonya E. Shooshan
National Institutes of Health, National Center for Biotechnology Information
- LRLaritza Rodriguez
National Institutes of Health, National Center for Biotechnology Information
Topics & keywords
- Upload
- Computer science
- Information retrieval
- Identification (biology)
- Coding (social sciences)
- Identifier
- DICOM
- Rendering (computer graphics)
- Quality Education