TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiologist Agreement for Mammographic Recall by Case Difficulty and Finding Type
AU - Onega, Tracy
AU - Smith, Megan
AU - Miglioretti, Diana L.
AU - Carney, Patricia A.
AU - Geller, Berta A.
AU - Kerlikowske, Karla
AU - Buist, Diana S.M.
AU - Rosenberg, Robert D.
AU - Smith, Robert A.
AU - Sickles, Edward A.
AU - Haneuse, Sebastien
AU - Anderson, Melissa L.
AU - Yankaskas, Bonnie
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the American Cancer Society, made possible by a generous donation from the Longaberger Company’s Horizon of Hope Campaign ( SIRSG-07-271 , SIRSG-07-272 , SIRSG-07-273 , SIRSG-07-274-01 , SIRSG-07-275 , SIRGS-06-281 , SIRSG-09-270-01 , SIRSG-09-271-01 , and SIRSG-06-290-04 ), the Breast Cancer Stamp Fund, and the National Cancer Institute Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium ( U01CA63740 , U01CA86076 , U01CA86082 , U01CA70013 , U01CA69976 , U01CA63731 , U01CA70040 , and HHSN261201100031C ). The collection of cancer and vital status data used in this study was supported in part by several state public health departments and cancer registries throughout the United States. For a full description of these sources, see http://www.breastscreening.cancer.gov/work/acknowledgement.html . The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Cancer Institute or the National Institutes of Health.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2012 American College of Radiology
PY - 2016/11/1
Y1 - 2016/11/1
N2 - Purpose The aim of this study was to assess agreement of mammographic interpretations by community radiologists with consensus interpretations of an expert radiology panel to inform approaches that improve mammographic performance. Methods From 6 mammographic registries, 119 community-based radiologists were recruited to assess 1 of 4 randomly assigned test sets of 109 screening mammograms with comparison studies for no recall or recall, giving the most significant finding type (mass, calcifications, asymmetric density, or architectural distortion) and location. The mean proportion of agreement with an expert radiology panel was calculated by cancer status, finding type, and difficulty level of identifying the finding at the patient, breast, and lesion level. Concordance in finding type between study radiologists and the expert panel was also examined. For each finding type, the proportion of unnecessary recalls, defined as study radiologist recalls that were not expert panel recalls, was determined. Results Recall agreement was 100% for masses and for examinations with obvious findings in both cancer and noncancer cases. Among cancer cases, recall agreement was lower for lesions that were subtle (50%) or asymmetric (60%). Subtle noncancer findings and benign calcifications showed 33% agreement for recall. Agreement for finding responsible for recall was low, especially for architectural distortions (43%) and asymmetric densities (40%). Most unnecessary recalls (51%) were asymmetric densities. Conclusions Agreement in mammographic interpretation was low for asymmetric densities and architectural distortions. Training focused on these interpretations could improve the accuracy of mammography and reduce unnecessary recalls.
AB - Purpose The aim of this study was to assess agreement of mammographic interpretations by community radiologists with consensus interpretations of an expert radiology panel to inform approaches that improve mammographic performance. Methods From 6 mammographic registries, 119 community-based radiologists were recruited to assess 1 of 4 randomly assigned test sets of 109 screening mammograms with comparison studies for no recall or recall, giving the most significant finding type (mass, calcifications, asymmetric density, or architectural distortion) and location. The mean proportion of agreement with an expert radiology panel was calculated by cancer status, finding type, and difficulty level of identifying the finding at the patient, breast, and lesion level. Concordance in finding type between study radiologists and the expert panel was also examined. For each finding type, the proportion of unnecessary recalls, defined as study radiologist recalls that were not expert panel recalls, was determined. Results Recall agreement was 100% for masses and for examinations with obvious findings in both cancer and noncancer cases. Among cancer cases, recall agreement was lower for lesions that were subtle (50%) or asymmetric (60%). Subtle noncancer findings and benign calcifications showed 33% agreement for recall. Agreement for finding responsible for recall was low, especially for architectural distortions (43%) and asymmetric densities (40%). Most unnecessary recalls (51%) were asymmetric densities. Conclusions Agreement in mammographic interpretation was low for asymmetric densities and architectural distortions. Training focused on these interpretations could improve the accuracy of mammography and reduce unnecessary recalls.
KW - Mammography
KW - agreement
KW - breast cancer
KW - screening
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jacr.2016.09.035
DO - 10.1016/j.jacr.2016.09.035
M3 - Article
C2 - 27814827
AN - SCOPUS:84995595310
SN - 1558-349X
VL - 13
SP - e72-e79
JO - Journal of the American College of Radiology
JF - Journal of the American College of Radiology
IS - 11
ER -