Abstract Archives of the RSNA, 2012
Charles E. Kahn MD, MS, Presenter: Shareholder, Hotlight Inc
Officer, Hotlight Inc
Harry Solomon, Abstract Co-Author: Employee, General Electric Company
Kevin O'Donnell, Abstract Co-Author: Employee, Toshiba Corporation
Curtis P. Langlotz MD, PhD, Abstract Co-Author: Shareholder, Montage Healthcare Solutions, Inc
Advisory Board, General Electric Company
Advisory Board, Elsevier, Inc
Advisory Board, Activate Networks, Inc
Spouse, Consultant, Amgen Inc
Spouse, Consultant, Novartis AG
Spouse, Consultant, Johnson and Johnson
Radiologists have embarked on an effort to develop templates for reporting medical imaging procedures. To promote the use of template-based reporting, the RSNA Reporting Committee has worked in concert with a variety of medical professional societies and medical information system producers to establish a set of international standards for radiology reporting.
The IHE and DICOM standards bodies provide important venues to develop standards needed to bring template-based radiology reporting into clinical practice.
The IHE and DICOM reporting standards efforts involve physicians, informatics professionals, and engineers. In addition to radiologists, these efforts have seen participation from pathology, ophthalmology, and veterinary medicine, and from developers of commercial reporting systems. International standards efforts provide a mechanism to engage corporate participation, which is essential to widespread dissemination of the technology. This presentation will review and update the progress in these standards development efforts.
The standards development efforts have been coordinated with the Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE; www.ihe.net) and Digital Imaging and Communication in Medicine (DICOM; dicom.nema.org) standards bodies. IHE develops integration profiles that describe how to apply existing standards to help systems work together. The IHE Radiology group is developing the Management of Radiology Report Templates (MRRT) profile to support mechanisms for templates to be queried by, pulled from, or pushed to relevant information systems. The MRRT profile will enable transfer of templates between reporting systems and foster the use of standard templates from template libraries created by radiology practices, professional organizations, and vendors. DICOM Working Group 8 (Structured Reporting) has undertaken development of DICOM Supplement 155 to describe the transformation of template-based reports into documents that comply with the Health Level Seven (HL7) Clinical Document Architecture, which is the international standard for clinical reports.
Kahn, C,
Solomon, H,
O'Donnell, K,
Langlotz, C,
International Standards to Support Structured Reporting in Radiology. Radiological Society of North America 2012 Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, November 25 - November 30, 2012 ,Chicago IL.
http://archive.rsna.org/2012/12020704.html