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. 2016 Nov 1;22(11):868–898. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2016.0149

Table 1.

Summary List of Empirical Evidence in Teleradiology: Intermediate Outcomes

REFERENCE YEAR COUNTRY STUDY DESIGN SAMPLE SIZE MODALITY/INVERVENTION FINDINGS COMMENTS
Cone et al.107 2005 Ecuador Comparative analysis: Observational 196 Digital camera CT and US >90% agreement in CT; 56% in US Higher agreement in CT than US
Eze et al.108 2005 United Kingdom Prospective case control 154 Mobile phone/ENT 100% agreement More confidence in X-ray box
Muller et al.109 2005 Germany RCT 1,080 Centralized network for oncology review Disease improvement observed: early stage = 49%; intermediate stage = 67% Participants benefited from program; high RT quality
Leader et al.110 2006 United States Descriptive/observational 1,003 Multisite mammography 66% agreement in telemammography Telemammography reduces recall for additional procedures by 50%
Yang et al.111 2006 United States Observational 3,744 Grid-enabled CAD Algorithm accuracy of 86.02% Atypical ductal hyperplasia had the highest false-positive rates
Javadi et al.112 2006 Thailand Comparative analysis: observational 192 Digital camera/pneumonia surveillance Digital camera: sensitivity = 89%; specificity = 75%; digitizer: 90% and 65% Digital camera did not compromise pneumonia
Tangtrakulwanich et al.113 2006 Thailand Comparative analysis: observational 150 Digital camera/fracture Digital camera; sensitivity = 90%, specificity 80.1% Digital camera cost $965 vs. $3000 for digitizer
Nitrosi et al.115 2007 Italy Observational 180,000 Digital radiology Productivity ↑12%; turnaround time ↓60%; imaging procedures ↑7%; Length of stay ↓12% Waiting time for outpatients ↓90 to 40 days for CT and from 90–180 to 30–60 days for US
Wardlaw et al.116 2007 5 Countries Comparative analysis: observational 207 Internet/ischemic changes Sensitivity and specificity are comparable Neuroradiologists saw more early ischemic diagnoses than did stroke physicians
Platts-Mills et al.117 2008 United States Comparative analysis: observational 787 Teleradiology vs. in-house/CT Discrepancies observed in 5.8% of interpretations Only one discrepancy in 550 paired comparisons resulted in adverse event
Kennedy et al.118 2009 United States Survey and case control 2,266 CT pulmonary angiography Improvement in number of studies completed in 20 min = 95% vs. 13%; percentage of writing interpretations improved from 51% to 62% Significant process improvements in interpreting inpatient imaging
Duka et al.119 2009 Serbia Comparative analysis: Observational 432 Camera for radiography in impacted molars Sensitivity = 99%; specificity = 99% Diagnosis from photographs was equal to real-time assessment
Hurlen et al.121 2010 Norway Retrospective record review 3,088 Diagnostic imaging PACS and RIS reduced LOS by 25% LOS reduced from 5.3 to 3.9 days
Ninos et al.122 2010 Greece Observational 144 PDA/diagnostic performance PDA provided rapid, secure, and convenient access Experts had difficulty diagnosing microcalcification
Lakkis et al.124 2011 Lebanon RCT 385 SMS/breast cancer screening Enhanced SMS equivalent Detailed SMS did not affect mammography intake
Rudat et al.125 2011 Saudi Arabia Observational 148 Online verification Setup accuracy the same Daily online verification recommended
Shaligram et al.127 2012 Multiple countries Retrospective record review 13,288 CT/appendicitis Readmissions (1.8% vs. 5.13%) Improved postoperative complications; lower cost
Hohmann et al.128 2012 Switzerland Observational 1,028 Outsourced radiology No disagreement = 79%; inconclusive, 4%; 1.3% omission Outsource radiology supported
John et al.129 2012 Singapore Comparative analysis: observational 264 IPad vs. workstation 3.4% major discrepancy; 5.6% minor discrepancy Variability accounted for by interobserver interpretations
Angileri et al.130 2012 Italy Retrospective record review 733 Remote second opinion Correct interpretation: 96.5% Average duration 38 min vs. 160 for in-person
Fruehwald-Pallamar et al.131 2012 Austria Comparative analysis: observational 200 Teleradiology network Automatic readout agreement: 90% and 97% Only 2.5% and 9.5% rated as poor at two institutions
Chang et al.133 2013 Taiwan Observational 3,770 Online/osteoporosis Sensitivity = 75%; specificity = 75% System had high reliability and validity
Puetz et al.134 2013 Germany Retrospective observational 536 Stroke teleneurology Discrepant findings 8%, only 1.7% clinically relevant Interobserver agreement κ = 0.62
Freeman et al.135 2013 United Kingdom Observational 253 Internet/shoulder injury Interobserver reliability κ = 0.81 Labeling accuracy higher in educational sites
Franczak et al.136 2014 United States Retrospective rater analysis 2,000 EHR/CT Inter-rater reliability = 0.82 EHR necessary for radiology in the ER
Lee et al.137 2014 United States Observational 444 Osteoporosis screening Increased treatment from 4.8% to 35.2% Improved rate of osteoporosis treatment in the VA
Schwartz et al.138 2014 Botswana Comparative analysis: observational 150 e-consult/dx accuracy Correct diagnosis in both modalities in 79% Image quality expected to improve
Lyon et al.139 2015 United States Retrospective record review 1,445 Telemedicine/referral Reduce patient referrals in rural areas One in four trauma patients used to be referred
Jacobs et al.140 2015 The Netherlands Retrospective record review 806 Teleradiology/fractures Improved fracture diagnosis from 9 to 2 Reduced unnecessary trips among patients with fractures

CAD, computer-aided detection; CT, computed tomography; EHR, electronic health records; ER, emergency room; US, ultrasound; VA, veterans administration.