Publications

2023

Kim, Charissa, Hamza Ali, Leo L Tsai, Julie Bulman, Dhruv Singhal, Brett Carroll, Muneeb Ahmed, and Jeffrey Weinstein. (2023) 2023. “Evaluation of Primary Lymphedema With Intranodal Lymphangiography.”. Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiology. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00270-023-03605-9.

PURPOSE: There are limited existing data on the lymphatic anatomy of patients with primary lymphedema (LED), which is caused by aberrant development of lymphatic channels. In addition, there is a paucity of contemporary studies that use groin intranodal lymphangiography (IL) to evaluate LED anatomy. The purpose of this retrospective observational study was to better delineate the disease process and anatomy of primary LED using groin IL.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We identified common groin IL findings in a cohort of 17 primary LED patients performed between 1/1/2017 and 1/31/2022 at a single institution. These patients were clinically determined to have primary lymphedema and demonstrated associated findings on lower extremity MR and lymphoscintigraphy.

RESULTS: Ten patients (59%) demonstrated irregular lymph node morphology or a paucity of lymph nodes on the more symptomatic laterality. Eight patients (47%) demonstrated lymphovenous shunting from pre-existing anastomoses between the lymphatic and venous systems. Eight patients (47%) demonstrated passage of contrast past midline to the contralateral lymphatics. Finally, 12 patients (71%) failed to opacify the cisterna chyli and thoracic duct on their initial lymphangiograms. Delayed computed tomography of 3 patients showed eventual central lymphatic opacification up to the renal veins, but none of these patients showed central lymphatic opacification to the thorax.

CONCLUSION: This descriptive, exploratory study demonstrates common central groin IL findings in primary LED to highlight patterns interventional radiologists should identify and report when addressing primary LED.

Parillo, Marco, Aart J van der Molen, Patrick Asbach, Fabian Henry Jürgen Elsholtz, Andrea Laghi, Maxime Ronot, Jim S Wu, Carlo Augusto Mallio, and Carlo Cosimo Quattrocchi. (2023) 2023. “The Role of Iodinated Contrast Media in Computed Tomography Structured Reporting and Data Systems (RADS): A Narrative Review.”. Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery 13 (11): 7621-31. https://doi.org/10.21037/qims-23-603.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: In recent years, there has been a large-scale dissemination of guidelines in radiology in the form of Reporting & Data Systems (RADS). The use of iodinated contrast media (ICM) has a fundamental role in enhancing the diagnostic capabilities of computed tomography (CT) but poses certain risks. The scope of the present review is to summarize the current role of ICM only in clinical reporting guidelines for CT that have adopted the "RADS" approach, focusing on three specific questions per each RADS: (I) what is the scope of the scoring system; (II) how is ICM used in the scoring system; (III) what is the impact of ICM enhancement on the scoring.

METHODS: We analyzed the original articles for each of the latest versions of RADS that can be used in CT [PubMed articles between January, 2005 and March, 2023 in English and American College of Radiology (ACR) official website].

KEY CONTENT AND FINDINGS: We found 14 RADS suitable for use in CT out of 28 RADS described in the literature. Four RADS were validated by the ACR: Colonography-RADS (C-RADS), Liver Imaging-RADS (LI-RADS), Lung CT Screening-RADS (Lung-RADS), and Neck Imaging-RADS (NI-RADS). One RADS was validated by the ACR in collaboration with other cardiovascular scientific societies: Coronary Artery Disease-RADS 2.0 (CAD-RADS). Nine RADS were proposed by other scientific groups: Bone Tumor Imaging-RADS (BTI-RADS), Bone‑RADS, Coronary Artery Calcium Data & Reporting System (CAC-DRS), Coronavirus Disease 2019 Imaging-RADS (COVID-RADS), COVID-19-RADS (CO-RADS), Interstitial Lung Fibrosis Imaging-RADS (ILF-RADS), Lung-RADS (LU-RADS), Node-RADS, and Viral Pneumonia Imaging-RADS (VP-RADS).

CONCLUSIONS: This overview suggests that ICM is not strictly necessary for the study of bones and calcifications (CAC-DRS, BTI-RADS, Bone-RADS), lung parenchyma (Lung-RADS, LU-RADS, COVID-RADS, CO-RADS, VP-RADS and ILF-RADS), and in CT colonography (C-RADS). On the other hand, ICM plays a key role in CT angiography (CAD-RADS), in the study of liver parenchyma (LI-RADS), and in the evaluation of soft tissues and lymph nodes (NI-RADS, Node-RADS). Future studies are needed in order to evaluate the impact of the new iodinated and non-iodinate contrast media, artificial intelligence tools and dual energy CT in the assignment of RADS scores.

Alswang, Jared M, Erick M Mbuguje, Azza Naif, Balowa Musa, Fabian M Laage Gaupp, and Vijay Ramalingam. (2023) 2023. “Assessment of Required Patient Travel to Receive Interventional Radiology Services in the Resource-Limited Setting of Tanzania.”. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology : JVIR 34 (12): 2213-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvir.2023.08.008.

This study aimed to evaluate the geographic patient profile of a country's first interventional radiology (IR) service in sub-Saharan Africa. From October 2018 to August 2022, travel time (1,339 patients) and home region (1,184 patients) were recorded from 1,434 patients who underwent IR procedures at Tanzania's largest referral center. Distances traveled by road were calculated from the administrative capital of each region using a web mapping platform (google.com/maps). The effect of various factors on distance and time traveled were assessed. Patients from all 31 regions in Tanzania underwent IR procedures. The mean and maximum calculated distance traveled by patients were 241.6 km and 1,387 km, respectively (Sk2 = 1.66); 25.0% of patients traveled for over 6 hours for their procedure. Patients traveled furthest for genitourinary procedures (mean = 293.4 km) and least for angioplasty and stent placement (mean = 123.9 km) (P < .001). To increase population access and reduce travel times, geographic data should be used to decentralize services.

Lewis, Paul Bennett, Resmi Ann Charalel, Aliaksei Salei, Andrew J Cantos, Greg J Dubel, Michael T Kassin, Tushar Garg, et al. (2023) 2023. “Challenges, Barriers, and Successes Of Standardized Report Templates: Results of a Society of Interventional Radiology Survey.”. Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology : JVIR 34 (12): 2218-2223.e10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvir.2023.08.020.

Registry data are being increasingly used to establish treatment guidelines, set benchmarks, allocate resources, and make payment decisions. Although many registries rely on manual data entry, the Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR) is using automated data extraction for its VIRTEX registry. This process relies on participants using consistent terminology with highly structured data in physician-developed standardized reports (SR). To better understand barriers to adoption, a survey was sent to 3,178 SIR members. Responses were obtained from 451 interventional radiology practitioners (14.2%) from 92 unique academic and 151 unique private practices. Of these, 75% used structured reports and 32% used the SIR SR. The most common barriers to the use of these reports include SR length (35% of respondents), lack of awareness about the SR (31%), and lack of agreement on adoption within practices (27%). The results demonstrated insights regarding barriers in the use and/or adoption of SR and potential solutions.

Karamzadeh, Mahsa, Mohamad Motaz Al Samman, Ana I Vargas, Rafeeque A Bhadelia, John Oshinski, Daniel L Barrow, Rouzbeh Amini, and Francis Loth. (2023) 2023. “The Effect of Posterior Fossa Decompression Surgery on Brainstem and Cervical Spinal Cord Dimensions in Adults With Chiari Malformation Type 1.”. World Neurosurgery 180: 149-154.e2. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2023.09.112.

OBJECTIVE: Posterior fossa decompression (PFD) surgery creates more space at the skull base, reduces the resistance to the cerebrospinal fluid motion, and alters craniocervical biomechanics. In this paper, we retrospectively examined the changes in neural tissue dimensions following PFD surgery on Chiari malformation type 1 adults.

METHODS: Measurements were performed on T2-weighted brain magnetic resonance images acquired before and 4 months after surgery. Measurements were conducted for neural tissue volume and spinal cord/brainstem width at 4 different locations; 2 width measurements were made on the brainstem and 2 on the spinal cord in the midsagittal plane. Cerebellar tonsillar position (CTP) was also measured before and after surgery.

RESULTS: Twenty-five adult patients, with a mean age of 38.9 ± 8.8 years, were included in the study. The cervical cord volume increased by an average of 2.3 ± 3.3% (P = 0.002). The width at the pontomedullary junction increased by 2.2 ± 3.5% (P < 0.01), while the width 10 mm caudal to this junction increased by 4.2 ± 3.9% (P < 0.0001). The spinal cord width at the base of second cervical vertebra and third cervical vertebra did not significantly change after surgery. The CTP decreased by 60 ± 37% (P < 0.0001) after surgery, but no correlation was found between CTP change and dimension change.

CONCLUSIONS: The brainstem width and cervical cord volume showed a modest increase after PFD surgery, although standard deviations were large. A reduction in compression after PFD surgery may allow for an increase in neural tissue dimension. However, clinical relevance is unclear and should be assessed in future studies with high-resolution imaging.

Doyle, Tracy J, Pierre-Antoine Juge, Anna L Peljto, Seoyeon Lee, Avram D Walts, Anthony Joseph Esposito, Sergio Poli, et al. (2023) 2023. “Short Peripheral Blood Leukocyte Telomere Length in Rheumatoid Arthritis-Interstitial Lung Disease.”. Thorax. https://doi.org/10.1136/thorax-2023-220022.

Shortened telomere lengths (TLs) can be caused by single nucleotide polymorphisms and loss-of-function mutations in telomere-related genes (TRG), as well as ageing and lifestyle factors such as smoking. Our objective was to determine if shortened TL is associated with interstitial lung disease (ILD) in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). This is the largest study to demonstrate and replicate that shortened peripheral blood leukocytes-TL is associated with ILD in patients with RA compared with RA without ILD in a multinational cohort, and short PBL-TL was associated with baseline disease severity in RA-ILD as measured by forced vital capacity percent predicted.