Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans

Diametric analysis is the standard approach utilized for tumor measurement on medical imaging. However, the availability of newer more sophisticated techniques may prove advantageous. An evaluation of diameter, area, and volume was performed on 64 different lung lesions by three trained users. These...

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Main Authors: Aaron Frenette, Joshua Morrell, Kirk Bjella, Edward Fogarty, James Beal, Vijay Chaudhary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2015-01-01
Series:Journal of Oncology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/632943
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spelling doaj-b7664580ab1d42ae8718c353b54f2cb12020-11-24T22:10:10ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Oncology1687-84501687-84692015-01-01201510.1155/2015/632943632943Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography ScansAaron Frenette0Joshua Morrell1Kirk Bjella2Edward Fogarty3James Beal4Vijay Chaudhary5Sanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USASanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USASanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USASanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USASanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USASanford Health, 300 N. Seventh Street, Bismarck, ND 58501, USADiametric analysis is the standard approach utilized for tumor measurement on medical imaging. However, the availability of newer more sophisticated techniques may prove advantageous. An evaluation of diameter, area, and volume was performed on 64 different lung lesions by three trained users. These calculations were obtained using a free DICOM viewer and standardized measuring procedures. Measurement variability was then studied using relative standard deviation (RSD) and intraclass correlation. Volumetric measurements were shown to be more precise than diametric. With minimal RSD and variance between different users, volumetric analysis was demonstrated as a reliable measurement technique. Additionally, the diameters were used to calculate an estimated area and volume; thereafter the estimated area and volume were compared against the actual measured values. The results in this study showed independence of the estimated and actual values. Estimated area deviated an average of 43.5% from the actual measured, and volume deviated 88.03%. The range of this variance was widely scattered and without trend. These results suggest that diametric measurements cannot be reliably correlated to actual tumor size. Access to appropriate software capable of producing volume measurements has improved drastically and shows great potential in the clinical assessment of tumors. Its applicability merits further consideration.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/632943
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aaron Frenette
Joshua Morrell
Kirk Bjella
Edward Fogarty
James Beal
Vijay Chaudhary
spellingShingle Aaron Frenette
Joshua Morrell
Kirk Bjella
Edward Fogarty
James Beal
Vijay Chaudhary
Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
Journal of Oncology
author_facet Aaron Frenette
Joshua Morrell
Kirk Bjella
Edward Fogarty
James Beal
Vijay Chaudhary
author_sort Aaron Frenette
title Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
title_short Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
title_full Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
title_fullStr Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
title_full_unstemmed Do Diametric Measurements Provide Sufficient and Reliable Tumor Assessment? An Evaluation of Diametric, Areametric, and Volumetric Variability of Lung Lesion Measurements on Computerized Tomography Scans
title_sort do diametric measurements provide sufficient and reliable tumor assessment? an evaluation of diametric, areametric, and volumetric variability of lung lesion measurements on computerized tomography scans
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Oncology
issn 1687-8450
1687-8469
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Diametric analysis is the standard approach utilized for tumor measurement on medical imaging. However, the availability of newer more sophisticated techniques may prove advantageous. An evaluation of diameter, area, and volume was performed on 64 different lung lesions by three trained users. These calculations were obtained using a free DICOM viewer and standardized measuring procedures. Measurement variability was then studied using relative standard deviation (RSD) and intraclass correlation. Volumetric measurements were shown to be more precise than diametric. With minimal RSD and variance between different users, volumetric analysis was demonstrated as a reliable measurement technique. Additionally, the diameters were used to calculate an estimated area and volume; thereafter the estimated area and volume were compared against the actual measured values. The results in this study showed independence of the estimated and actual values. Estimated area deviated an average of 43.5% from the actual measured, and volume deviated 88.03%. The range of this variance was widely scattered and without trend. These results suggest that diametric measurements cannot be reliably correlated to actual tumor size. Access to appropriate software capable of producing volume measurements has improved drastically and shows great potential in the clinical assessment of tumors. Its applicability merits further consideration.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/632943
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