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Vendors match wares in first ECR workstation face-off

March 10, 2008 Vendors match wares in first ECR workstation face-off John C. Hayes -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Representatives for five workstation vendors worked fast and furiously to complete an assigned set of image postprocessing tasks during the ECR's first workstation face-off Saturday. The tasks covered common challenges in postprocessing: finding and measuring coronary stenoses revealed on coronary CT scans and polyps obtained via CT colonography. Representatives for the five vendors -- GE Healthcare, Philips MedicalSystems, Medical Solutions, TeraRecon, and Vital Images -- were given four minutes to put their workstations through cardiac and colon data sets provided by ECR. Summaries at the end showed surprisingly wide variations in their findings. Degrees of stenosis found by the systems ranged from a low of 42% to a high of 100%. Sizes of the largest polyps found ranged from 12 mm to 24 mm. The workstation face-off concept has spread rapidly since it was first introduced in 2003 at Stanford University's annual multislice CT conference in San Francisco. This year's ECR face-off featured the same five vendors who joined the original Stanford event, said Robert Taylor, president of TeraRecon and one of many industry observers who crowded into the session to watch. The approaches used have moved much closer to a common standard, Taylor said. Vendors apparently are watching each other and trying to duplicate the best features they observe at the face-off sessions. Still, difference remain among the five. Some workstations allowed users to set sensitivity for computer-aided polyp detection, and the number of potential polyps identified by CAD systems ranged from five (TeraRecon and Siemens) to 16 (GE). Strategies for measuring polyp size and stenosis ranged from highly automated to very nearly manual. For the coronary tests, participants were required to load images into the software, segment the coronary tree, label the coronaries either manually or automatically, report percent area and diameter of stenosis, and export a screenshot of the stenosis.

See full article and related articles at DiagnosticImaging.com
This article was republished with permission from CMPMedica, LLC

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