Teleradiology provides healthcare facilities with quick image and data sharing, and the
prices just keep dropping.
The power of PACS is undeniable, but its not the only
communication tool thats changing the structure of the radiology business.
Teleradiology adds another layer to the HIS/RIS/PACS hierarchy and is profoundly impacting
the nature and speed of image sharing by acting as a virtual courier, transferring images
around the world.
This communication breakthrough allows users to communicate information in PACS to
those outside the network by electronically transmitting both the images and the
consultative text to a variety of users, including referring physicians, consultants,
affiliated hospitals, and practitioners home offices. And all of it can be done
without hefty FedEx and courier bills.
Not surprisingly, practitioners from a range of specialties beyond radiologists and
radiology technologists are finding ways to implement the efficiencies of this digital
revolution. Ambulatory surgery centers, independent imaging centers, and orthopedic groups
also are adopting such systems.
Getting Connected
Teleradiology can add a functional layer to PACSand indeed is incorporated
on some level or another in almost every PACS. But also, teleradiology is quite capable of
holding its own. Still, many healthcare executives mistakenly believe that if they use
teleradiology, theyre using PACS; however, teleradiology is an output method, not a
linking system. PACS is not a required element for teleradiology, which also can be
purchased as a stand-alone system.
AMICAS LightView powers Personal AMICAS for push/pull
Web-based teleradiology.
Typically, teleradiology is the initial entrée for many institutions to get into
PACS, says Brad Levin, director of strategic marketing for AMICAS Inc (Boston).
Once [institutions] provide these services, they frequently upgrade their systems to
full PACS.
Also, teleradiology is a valuable tool for many smaller organizations that dont
yet have the volume to justify the capital expenditure to acquire PACS. You put in a
Web-based teleradiology server, and youve taken your first step toward PACS,
agrees Kobi Margolin, VP of Algotec (Duluth, Ga), an Eastman Kodak company. The
implementation can be done in baby steps.
The Kodak DirectView Web Distribution System can be used for
both teleradiology and Web-based image distribution to referring physicians. It also forms
the foundation for a full Kodak DirectView PACS System 5 implementation.
First, the most basic stand-alone teleradiology systemavailable for less than
$100,000requires only teleradiology software and a Web server. Most physicians have
a PC and an Internet connection for plugging in to the system. The next step is adding
storage and archiving architecture. The final addition is a high-end workstation for
primary reading.
Choosing a teleradiology system can be a daunting task; the goal is speed, and any
kinks in the system undermine that aim. As company reps tout their own products and
services, its important to understand which elements of a package differentiate one
teleradiology provider from another.
Some vendors will lead you to believe that they have magic beans that will make
all the implementation issues magically disappear, says Joe Mulvihill, director of
marketing and strategic alliances at BRIT Systems (Dallas). There are no magic
beans. No magic hardware will make electrons move faster through one vendors network
line than anothers. No magic compression algorithm will drastically reduce the image
data set size without losing the original image detail.
Everyone is using the same general types of hardware and compression algorithms,
with everyone being required to obey the same laws of physics, he continues.
The differences between the vendors are the specific methods they use to bring all
of these items into a useable solution.
| Pushing the
Image Envelope Radiologists arent losing
sleep over the push technology that speeds image transmission to their home computers
while theyre on calland thats the point.
When institutions push rather than pull images through teleradiology systems, they buy
on-call radiologists more time for sleep. With pull platforms, radiologists log on to
their computers at the sound of their pagers, then rub sleep from their eyes, yawn, and
proceed to wait for images to download. The entire process takes about 1520 minutes.
All so he can spend about 30 seconds interpreting the image.
Push systems allow these on-call specialists to slumber peacefully while the images are
transmitted via the Internet. The hospital knows when the image is ready to view on the
radiologists computer, and a pager alerts him that the images are ready to be read.
A full night of sleep its not, but when you shave a half-hour or so off of each
emergency call, expenses go down, and on-call radiologists are grateful for the additional
shut-eye.
But the importance of push technology is declining, says Kobi Margolin of Algotec, an
Eastman Kodak company. The significance of push is that the connection was usually
slow because of slow bandwidth, he says, which usually isnt the case anymore.
The revolution that came along with the proliferation of the Internet connection is
that bandwidth has become so much cheaper. Even people working from home have connections
that are 40 or 50 times faster than they once were.
Margolin agrees that its a useful tool in such on-call environments, but his
enthusiasm leans more toward streaming technology, which offers exciting capabilities.
When images are pulled over to the users Web browser, we bring them up in
layers of increasing quality, he explains. At first, you dont get the
full quality of the image; it takes a few more seconds. But you have something on the
screen that you can begin working with. While you identify areas of interest within the
image, the system continues to load the rest of the data.
Pegasus Imaging Corps Image Delivery Protocol is the first true compressed image
region-of-interest delivery technology, says the companys Will Clonts. This
communications protocol consists of a transmitter interface and a receiver interface, and
it can be used in connection mode on the server or in a connectionless mode.
Rather than wait for an entire image to load when its clear which portion of the
image they need to focus on, users can draw a box around the particular area theyd
like to see in higher resolution. Even over lower bandwidths, radiologists can view large
images with a fairly high resolution.
Still, when bandwidth is expanded, its important to remember that image sizes are
increasing as well. Anything that speeds data transmission is welcome to a radiologist
whose priority is to read more images more quickly
and to get a good nights
sleep.
HCF |
A Brief History
Teleradiology has made impressive strides since its camera-on-a-stick
days, when radiology techs simply put film on a light box, did a frame grab with a digital
camera, and transmitted the image to an end user. The process was strangled by
limitations: the
resolution of the camera, where noise was added to the image; transmission over
telephone lines, where details were lost; and the use of analog phone lines, which
compounded that loss.
Sound like ancient history? This process proliferated as recently as the late 1980s and
early 1990sand, while uncommon, its still sometimes used today, according to
John Romlein, MSE, VP of the eastern region at Xtria Healthcare (Dallas). As long as
it works, theyll still use it, he admits.
More popular today, though, is a teleradiology system thats integrated with PACS,
giving users more bang for their buck with improved quality and efficiency.
Teleradiologys popularity can be attributed, in part, to its own transformation.
As recently as the late 1990s, teleradiology required a dedicated send station
and at least one dedicated receive station. Even when technology evolved and
allowed the receive station to be a laptop computer for improved portability,
the system was unwieldy and cost prohibitive.
Enter Web-based image management. [A users] home PC became the
teleradiology receive station by virtue of the connection that [the user] had
to the Web server, explains Algotecs Margolin. Around 1996, we came up
with a different model for teleradiology. It used the power of the Internet to move around
images. We could provide you with a Web server, which became the epicenter for images that
could have been acquired in many different locations, and it made those images accessible
from many different locations.
With Web-based systems, the dedicated send and receive stations were replaced by a Web
server. And with standardization of PACS and DICOM, teleradiology became more affordable
and accessible.
You want teleradiology to present the same information that your system
has, says Xtrias Romlein. The images themselves are DICOM accessible, and the
informational files that accompany the images need to be as well. Database entries
can be transported only by a system that can read that information from the
database.
AMICAS Levin adds, PACS are used for the primary interpretation of
diagnostic imaging studies and are archived in some kind of digital capacity, eliminating
or reducing the production of film. With teleradiology, hospitals and imaging centers can
send those digital images to a destination workstation at the other end. They can get an
on-call opinion over the phone or through a dictation system.
Images On Call
Overworked radiologists havent missed a beat in embracing a system that
buys them more sleep during the nights theyre on call. Instead of being summoned to
a hospital in the middle of the night to review films, radiologists can access images sent
to their home computers.
Its very often a rule-out situation, Romlein says. Emergency
evaluations usually fall into the gross abnormality category, making the images simple to
evaluate even without sophisticated hardware. Thats important for radiologists
without state-of-the-art home computer systems.
Teleradiology represents a paradigm shift in the way the institution deals with
workflow, Levin says. They can access images
digitallyanywherewithout having to print. Its like coming from the Stone
Age into the modern era.
And its happening at warp speed. PACS have been in play for about 15 years, and
teleradiology for about 4 years; yet, many organizations cant imagine working
without either system.
Its much more attainable than its ever been, Levin says.
The smartest institutions are those that have an upgrade capability with their
systems.
For example, AMICAS products have what Levin calls incremental
adoption capability, meaning customers can purchase a system that services their
current needs and remain confident that they dont have to scrap the system if they
decide to add functionality down the line. The upgrades will work with the older systems
that the customers have purchased.
The system works virtually the same for every size of institution, and the cost is
assessed based upon licenses. The capabilities are the same, although larger institutions
often opt to purchase more servers. And those servers could be quickly overloaded if users
arent efficient with their use of the advanced communication tools.
A comparison of image quality using Pegasus Imagings JPEG
2000 compression (left) to standard JPEG compression (right). Both images are highly
compressed from a raw image to approximately 15KB each.
Size Matters
The sizes of the images are continuing to increase as digitizing
advances, says Will Clonts, medical imaging business development manager for Pegasus
Imaging Corp (Tampa, Fla). File sizes, numbers of slides, and images per study are
[all] increasing. [Users] need to deliver more images over a networkquickly.
Increasingly, companies are boosting transmission speed by utilizing image compression
applications, or wavelet compression, like Pegasus JPEG 2000. Wavelet compression
allows images to be condensed so that they can be transmitted faster to the end users. For
example, an image compressed at a 10:1 ratio to be transmitted 10 times faster than the
original image.
Its a revolution, Clonts exclaims. It allows radiologists to
view images faster and see what they want to see faster and more efficiently. And it
conforms to DICOM. Some type of image-compression protocol is included with most
teleradiology systems.
But the compression of images inevitably means some loss of integrity in the
transmitted image. If systems are capable of compressing an image to a tenth of its
original size, the usability of that image could suffer. The acceptable compression ratio
varies with original image quality and modality. However, these quality compromises most
likely will be unimportant when the images are not intended for complete diagnostics.
Some compression algorithms can do about a 2.3:1 ratio with no loss of
information, says BRIT Systems Mulvihill. With CT or MRI, you might be
able to use 5:1 or 8:1. But you absolutely should not use teleradiology for mammography.
People want to digitize that film at a high enough resolution, but were not there
yet.
Monitoring Progress
As digitally transmitted images get more sophisticated, so must the monitors used
to view the images. Although teleradiologys on-call functions tend to work well on a
standard PC monitor, radiology departments demand more of the hardware they use on-site.
They usually know what theyre looking for, says David Payne, an
account representative for Data-Ray Corp (Westminster, Colo), whose customers are
primarily large university hospital facilities and imaging centers.
Data-Rays newest panel, the Ad Cal Phase II, was
introduced at RSNA 2003.
And what they want is technology that keeps pace with the applications theyre
using. Data-Ray offers the only 20-inch panel on the market for image viewing, Payne says.
At RSNA last November, the company unveiled the Ad Cal Phase II, an 11-bit monitor with
self-calibration that distinguishes more than 7,000 shades of gray.
Payne says, It makes the images more precise, which is increasingly
important as people move away from printouts and interpret images on-screen. And
radiologists can read them more quickly. They want to be able to read faster, because
thats how theyre getting paid.
| Open All
Night RWhat would a patient say if he knew that his X-rays, taken in a rural hospital in
the Midwest, were read by a radiologist halfway around the world? It happens every day,
but this hypothetical patient is blissfully unaware that the treatment process ever left
the small-town emergency room where he was admitted.
Its happening in a sector of the
teleradiology industry called nighthawking. And the renegade flavor of the term is
appropriate, given the controversy that the practice stirs up in certain circles. The
global economy has arrived in healthcare.
With radiologists in short supply and imaging studies
soaring, institutions are increasingly relying upon nighthawking firms to provide 24-hour
coverage.
With nighthawking, organizations send radiology images via
a virtual private network for diagnosis by radiologists at a third-party organization
whose sole purpose is to provide on-call availability for its clients. And often, these
third-party companies are based on the other side of the globe, say in India or Australia.
You send images to someone whos awake,
says John Romlein, MSE, of Xtria Healthcare.
In addition to personnel issues, the decreasing cost of
technology has helped nighthawking proliferate.
Communication lines are getting cheaper, says
Joe Mulvihill of BRIT Systems. It used to be that you had to pay $6,000 to $10,000 a
month for a T1 line. Now you can get the speed you need for as little as $100 a
month.
Still, if an image is read in India, that radiologist must
be licensed in the state where the image originated. Most reputable firms comply, but
experts recommend that users do their homework before contracting with any nighthawking
firmjust as they should with any vendor.
Forward-thinking professionals are less skeptical of these
unconventional radiology-reading services, focusing instead on the larger payoff of
increased efficiency at decreased cost. Paul Elliott of DMS Health Group hints that much
skepticism is spurred by our tentative adoption of technology that institutes a major
change in business as usual. Some of the images are sent overseas to India, he
acknowledges. Not having the brick and mortar is unsettling for some people.
Elliott, who oversees DMS Health Groups fleet of
mobile-imaging units, is happy with the services his company has received from APEX
Radiology, a nighthawking service in Coral Springs, Fla.
Mulvihill says that the decision to use a nighthawking
service is driven by a serious demand within a facility. [Decision-makers]
dont want to pay an on-call radiologist at night, or they cant find
radiologists willing to move to their rural areas, he says.
Plus, its no secret that radiologists are in short
supply, adds Brad Levin of AMICAS Inc, a company that provides teleradiology solutions not
only to traditional clinical institutions, but to nighthawking services as well: Imaging
on Call (Wappingers Falls, NY) and IRAD Services (Pitcairn, Pa). Its an
employees market. They want quality of life, so they move to California or Hawaii;
they move to Australia. And teleradiology allows them to conduct business as usual
virtually.
HCF |
Teleradiology in Action
Paul Elliott, north central region VP at DMS Health Group (Fargo, ND), is
enthusiastic about the power of teleradiology. Elliott oversees his companys fleet
of mobile-imaging units that service nursing homes throughout the Twin Cities region of
Minnesota.
Its helping us become more efficient, he says. Weve
switched from a film-based system. This fall, we implemented a network of computed
radiography [CR] systems, strategically placed around the Twin Cities.
Before implementing the teleradiology system, DMS radiology techs had to make
frequent road trips over long distances to download the images taken at the nursing homes
and transmit them to radiologists for reading.
Now they make shorter, less frequent drives to the six CR stations, which are tied to
the main office through a T1 line with PACS. In addition to sending the newly created
images, the PACS system automates the process of prefetching images of a
similar body part of the same patient and sending those images to the
radiologistagain, saving driving time and costs for an even quicker solution.
DMS has partnered with APEX Radiology Inc (Coral Springs, Fla), a teleradiology
solutions provider, to make the images, dictation, and related files accessible on the
Web.
It doesnt matter how fast you get to the nursing home if you cant
transmit those images quickly, Elliott explains. Our level of patient care is
increasing greatly. Our radiology [technologists] can spend less time on the road. In a
portable business, theyd rather be doing X-rays than driving.
And weve gained four new customers without having to add staff, he
continues. We have PACS in place, so we can add business without adding capital
expenses. From a portable standpoint, we have a jump on the competition. Most are
privately held and dont have the capital.
Capital expenditures didnt cause DMS to hesitate for even a moment. According to
Elliott, the company expects an extraordinarily short time frame for recouping the
implementation costs of the system.
Left: In teleradiology, it is imperative that images
appear the same, no matter what display device they are viewed on. Calibrating all
workstation displays to conform to the DICOM grayscale calibration standard optimizes the
display of images in remote locations. As long as the digital driving levels of the image
are preserved and passed to the remote workstation for display, the resulting viewable
image should be the same, [regardless of the] workstation. Testing of the workstation
calibration prior to fielding and periodically thereafter is a critical feature of a
teleradiology process. Here, John Weiser, PhD, of Xtria Healthcare performs DICOM
grayscale calibration analysis on several high-resolution flat-panel monitors before
deploying them into a hospital.
John Romlein MSE, VP of Xtria Healthcare
Looking to the Future
Even as the industry is experiencing its wildest success, the future of
teleradiology could be its gradual demisein name, at least. Its own successful
adaptation of DICOM standards and PACS connectivity means its being absorbed by the
PACS with which its designed to interface.
Teleradiology, as part of the changing model, is disappearing as a separate
technology, Algotecs Margolin says. Its becoming a part of PACS.
It almost becomes a side effect of the larger system.
And the price of PACS continues to decrease from the intimidating seven-figure
expenditures of yesterday. It has become more modular and affordable, costing several
hundred thousand dollars instead of the recent million-dollar price tags.
Even if the term teleradiology doesnt survive the decade, its functions will
continue to shape the industry.
Holly Celeste Fisk is a contributing writer for Medical Imaging.