Archive for the ‘Telehealth’ Category

AccelPath Collaborating With Scanner Manufacturers

March 7, 2012

GAITHERSBURG, MD and WESTWOOD, MA, Mar 06, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — AccelPath, LLC ("AccelPath" or the "Company"), a wholly-owned and operating subsidiary of Technest Holdings, Inc., conducts ongoing discussions with several scanner manufacturers.

AccelPath is in discussions with several slide scanner manufacturers to provide their equipment to clinics and hospitals. Scanner deployments will allow the Company to further digitize all aspects of pathology services, allowing advancement of its strategy of providing efficient, timely, fully automated, digital pathology services using existing electronic information technologies. AccelPath will also utilize these relationships to further advance clinics and hospitals with worksite planning, technical services (including software interfaces and scanner operations), network engineering, professional pathology services and post implementation support.

"We are excited about the significant progress being made toward implementation of digital pathology. This would complete a fully digital loop between treating physician and trained pathologist," said Shekhar Wadekar, the Company's Chief Executive Officer. "We are gaining customer acceptance of our workflow solution and this will increase customer awareness and confidence in the Company's product offerings."

About AccelPath AccelPath provides technology solutions that play a key role in delivering information required for diagnosis of diseases and other pathologic conditions with and through its associated institutional pathologists. The medical institutions, with whom the Company partners, prepare comprehensive diagnostic reports of a patient's condition and consult with referring physicians to help determine the most appropriate treatment. Such diagnostic reports enable the early detection of disease, allowing referring physicians to make informed and timely treatment decisions that improve their patients' health in a cost-effective manner. The Company seeks out referring physicians and histology laboratories in need of high-quality pathology interpretations and manages HIPAA-compliant digital case delivery and reporting while developing comprehensive solutions for managing medical information.

AccelPath is currently focused on the $14 billion anatomic pathology market in the US. The Company's business model builds upon the expertise of experienced pathologists to provide seamless, reliable and comprehensive pathology and special test offerings to referring physicians using conventional and digital technologies. The Company establishes longstanding relationships with the referring physicians as a result of focused delivery of its partner's diagnostic services, personalized responses and frequent consultations, and its proprietary flexible information technology, or IT, solutions that are customizable to the referring physicians or laboratories as well as the pathologists' needs. Such diagnostic reports often enable the early detection of disease, allowing referring physicians to make informed and timely treatment decisions that improve their patients' health in a cost-effective manner. AccelPath's IT and communications platform enables it to efficiently and securely deliver diagnostic reports to referring physicians. In addition, AccelPath's IT platform enables close tracking and monitoring of medical statistics.

Technest focuses on the design, research, development and integration of three-dimensional imaging devices and systems primarily in the healthcare industries. The Company also develops solutions and intelligent surveillance devices and systems, as well as three-dimensional facial recognition systems for security and law enforcement agencies. Historically, the Company's largest customers have been the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense. The Company's solutions leverage several core proprietary technology platforms, including 3D imaging technologies.

Additional Company information may be found on the Internet at:

www.accelpath.com

Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains certain "forward-looking statements" relating to the business of the Company, which can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as "may," "will," "expect," "anticipate," "intend," "estimate," "believe," "project," "continue," "plan," "forecast," or other similar words, or the negative thereof, unless the context requires otherwise. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements about the Company's current discussions with scanner manufacturers, the Company's expected future performance and the acceptance of the Company's product offerings. The results anticipated by any or all of these forward-looking statements may not occur. In addition, these statements reflect management's current views with respect to future events and are subject to numerous risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in or implied by these forward-looking statements. Factors that could affect those results include, but are not limited to, our ability to conclude our discussions with these manufacturers on favorable terms, the acceptance of our solutions in the marketplace, the efforts of our sales force, general economic conditions, and those described in the Company's reports on Forms 8-K, 10-Q and 10-K and proxy statements and information statements, which have been or will be filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), including without limitation under the caption "Risk Factors" in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on October 13, 2011. Many of the factors that will determine the outcome of the subject matter of this press release are beyond the Company's ability to control or predict. The Company undertakes no obligation and expressly disclaim any obligation, to revise or publicly update any forward-looking statements, or to make any other forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Source: Marketwatch

iPad helps saves man’s life

March 4, 2012

Think the iPad is just for e-mail, eMagazines and Angry Birds? Even before the anticipated release of iPad3 very shortly with a higher resolution monitor, the iPad has been credited with helping to save a man's life. 

Still think it couldn't work for digital pathology?  Read an eSlide, make an eDifference? Get the right diagnosis for the right patient at the right time?

Still think Pathology 2.0 doesn't have a place along side Medicine 2.0?

Keep reading…

The world-renowned Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota has been issuing iPads to physicians for a while, and now one of the Apple tablets is credited with helping to save the life of a man who suffered an arterial blockage at the facility.

As reported in the Post-Bulletin newspaper, 48-year-old Andy McMonigle was working out with his cycling club at the clinic's Dan Abraham Healthy Living Center when he began to feel intense pressure in his arm. McMonigle has a history of heart trouble, so he immediately went to the locker room and asked a man for help. That man was Mayo Clinic internal medicine resident Dr. Daniel Leuders, who stayed by the side of McMonigle and yelled loudly for assistance.

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Two other Mayo residents (brothers Daniel and Christopher DeSimone) were literally just around the corner, so when they arrived Leuders reached into his backpack and pulled out his iPad. Within seconds, Leuders was connected to the Mayo's electronic medical record system, where he was able to pull up McMonigle's medical history.

 

The history showed that McMonigle had a heart stent installed after a previous heart attack four years ago, which made the physicians suspect that he was suffering from a blockage in the stent. When an ambulance crew arrived, Leuders and the other physicians held the iPad record of McMonigle's previous EKG alongside the strip chart that was being printed in real time. What they saw further confirmed their suspicions about the blockage.

The physicians made a choice based on the EKG records that probably saved McMonigle's life. Rather than wait upwards of three hours to run a blood test to verify the clotting, the doctors rushed McMonigle to the cardiac catheterization lab where a team (alerted by activating an emergency code) was waiting. They removed the clot from his artery, which was about 90 percent blocked.

Within three days, McMonigle was released from the hospital and after four more days, he was working out again at the Healthy Living Center.


 

Virtual Microscopy – Real Regulations

February 29, 2012

 

Nice read by Dr. Stacey Mills over at Pathology Network (Pn Blog). A recognized expert in surgical pathology and director of such at the University of Virginia, he writes, "It seems somewhat surprising, at least to me, that a technique based on standard light microscopy, with microscopes being essentially unregulated, Class I devices, should be given the "highest risk" class III rating." Vendors will have to speak to this at upcoming USCAP meeting.  I hope the word "surprise" is not in their vocabulary given statements made on this topic back at the FDA panel meeting in 2009 and inviting the FDA back to Pathology Visions for guidance on the subject.

The lead article in the January 2012 issue of CAP Today addresses the pending FDA regulation of whole slide imagers (WSI's). The FDA has concluded dthat these devices are "Class III" medical devices, and as such are subject to considerable federal regulation (compared to Class I and II devices).  Depending on your perspective, this is either a good thing for patient safety or the death knell for rapid development, certification and deployment of these devices in the United States, with many companies looking elsewhere for testing and validation).
 
By way of quick review, Class I devices are lowest risk and require no pre-market notification.  Your light microscope is, believe it or not, classified as a Class I device.  Class II devices are considered "moderate risk" and are usually based on modifications of prior approved devices or techniques.  Class III devices are considered "highest risk" and such devices require premarket FDA approval, quality controls, etc. Automated cytology screeners, for example, are Class III devices. The FDA has said that WSI's belong in this category as well.
 
It seems somewhat surprising, at least to me, that a technique based on standard light microscopy, with microscopes being essentially unregulated, Class I devices, should be given the "highest risk" Class III rating.  Although the rationale for that decision may be difficult to fathom, it has, in fact, been made and is highly unlikely to be reversed.
The fact that the FDA has even been reviewing WSI's and has decided to regulate them as "highest risk" Class III devices, may come as a surprise to most end-user pathologists since the topic of regulation is understandably not a major one at trade shows where vendors try to sell these devices.  It certainly isn't a topic the vendors themselves are likely to bring up, at least until now.
 
Although the FDA has been less than specific in discussing their thinking, they have indicated that they have concerns about image quality when compared to standard light microscopy, and the effect of navigating on a computer screen v. moving a slide on a microscope.  It is even unclear whether WSI's might be approved for a certain TYPE of specimen or group of diagnoses and not for other types or groups.  Might it be approved for small core biopsies and not for big tissue blocks?  Might it not be approved for hematologic malignancies, where the diagnosis often requires viewing large areas at relatively high magnification, something that is more difficult with a WSI?  At this point, no one knows.  Clinical trials comparing the accuracy of WSI's v. traditional microscopy will be difficult to construct and time consuming to perform, but will likely provide the data to answer these questions.
 
Given the FDA's pace of action in regard to other issues, it's now expected that it may take up to five years for the first devices to be approved in the United States, with Aperio likely to be among the first.  Some companies will most likely concentrate their efforts in Europe where the approval process (and subsequent sales) are likely to be much more rapid.
 
There are many unanswered questions at this early juncture, but it does seem clear that buying and using a WSI for clinical (not research) diagnosis would not be a prudent move at this point in time.  If you are currently using a WSI for primary clinical diagnosis, you had better have "state of the art" (whatever that is!) validation policies in effect, and even then your CLIA or CAP inspection is likely to be problematic.   Even when these instruments gain approval, their use for diagnosis at a distance will fall under the highly diverse state laws regarding telemedicine.  A topic I covered in one of my early blogs, "Down the Telepathology Rabbit Hole."

Published: 2/27/2012

Read more…

 

 

Mills

Stacey E. Mills, MD, a graduate of University of Virginia (UVA) and the UVA Medical Center, has authored nearly 230 articles, 20+ books, atlases and monographs—including the renowned Sternberg's Diagnostic Surgical Pathology. He has been a practicing Professor and Staff Pathologist at UVA for 30+ years and is Director of Surgical Pathology and Cytopathology. His clinical specialty is general surgical pathology with emphasis on neoplasms and neoplasm-like lesions. Dr. Mills is also Editor-in-Chief of The American Journal of Surgical Pathology.

 

Web applications and cloud hosting bring new affordable options to Digital Pathology

February 28, 2012

Web applications and cloud hosting bring new affordable options to Digital Pathology

Tissue Imaging is ready to go digital. In the last decade technology advances in hardware, computing, networking as well as declining storage prices have made storing and handling Whole Slide Images technically viable. The advantages of digital imaging are apparent and market size for pathology is significant, so a flock of companies from pioneers like Aperio and BioImagene, to established players like Leica, Zeiss, Olympus, Phillips and GE got busy working on innovative digital solutions for pathologists.

Today they have solutions that work well, but with the technical problem solved, the economic problem remains for typical pathology lab.  The Digital Pathology package usually includes a slide scanner, an image server and  software for handling and viewing digital slides, and will cost upwards of $150K for a typical installation. This price tag may be attainable for a large hospital chain with capital budgets and IT staff, but 80% of US pathology labs are small business employing staff of 10 people or less.  They are service providers that charge “by the drink” and have no capital budgets or IT support.  They cannot justify large IT investments or technical support staff.

For those who spent their careers in IT, this looks all too familiar: remember those old enterprise IT systems? If you wanted to have company email, share calendar and access your files remotely on the same server, you would have to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on servers, software and IT support.  That is until cloud and web applications came along.  Now any small business can get big business IT for affordable monthly rate as long as it is connected to the internet, and every large tech company from Cisco to Microsoft is working hard to package their technology offerings for small businesses.

Serving the small business market economically is the inevitable next step and a challenge for Digital Pathology vendors. Number of industry innovators like Mikroscan, DigiPath, Objective Imaging, ViewsIQ and others are pushing technology envelope trying to bring the cost of equipment within the affordability range for a typical lab. They manage to bring hardware price under $30K. Yet, there is another challenge to overcome: small businesses have “0-0-0” expectation from technology. That means zero installation effort, zero learning curve and zero support. They need technology that “just works” and expect vendors to deliver it. The logical solution: cloud hosting and web applications. If done right, cloud software and web applications can bring the same benefits to pathology labs as they did to other businesses in other areas.

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Houston-based software company, Smart Imaging Technologies aspires to bring cloud computing and web applications for whole slide imaging to Digital Pathology with software called Simagis Live. The company experience offers insights for those who are considering whole slide imaging in the cloud:

Upload. Once you move imaging server from the local network, uploading digital slides becomes a critical issue.  Traditional remote upload methods like FTP or WebDav do not work well for large image files; they drop data packets and take forever to complete the job. Smart Imaging had to develop special Turbo Upload Utility that can take Whole Slide Image or folder with image tiles and move it to remote server at blazing speed of 1.5 GB/ minute on high-speed internet connection, all with just 3 mouse clicks, right from the web browser. 

Access and Sharing. Small businesses do not conform to unified corporate IT policies. They use variety of computers, operating systems and browsers. So, the web image browser should “just work” across all computers, operating systems and browsers too, period. And don’t forget tablets! “Just works” means nothing to download, install or update before you can view digital slide online, be it on Windows, Mac, iPad, or Android tablet. Sharing and collaboration process in general should be both easy and secure. Users can invite collaborators and share digital slides in a few clicks, but also they should be able to separate shared and private images and revoke access at any time.

Integration. This issue is absolutely critical to success. In order to meet “0-0-0” expectation, the software should work seamlessly with the imaging hardware, making connections and handling images behind the scenes.  Simagis Live software, for example, includes nifty integration feature called “MicroPlug”.  It adds additional menu option “Save and Share” to imaging device software. When user clicks it, the digital slide is saved to disk and uploaded to user workspace on cloud server at the same time, automatically behind the scenes. The Company does not mind if an imaging device manufacturer puts custom branding on top of the software, in fact it encourages OEM and custom branding solutions as they deliver the most cohesive experience to the end user.  

Business Model and PricingSoftware technology vendors have to structure their offeringsso that they are paid the same way that their clients are paid and make money when their clients make money. They have to give customers no-obligation trials and free-tier service to try the new technology. Cloud software and web applications can provide that flexibility. In the case of Simagis Live, anybody can sign up for free service and get 2GB of space on public application server. If they like the experience, they can get additional space, rent private cloud server or install software on-site.  Clients can pay for only what they, by month or by image, with no upfront capital investments, long-term commitments, installation or IT costs.

In the coming years tissue imaging will follow the path of other imaging modalities like X-ray, CT and MRI and turn digital.  Web applications hold a lot of promise for Digital Pathology and Tissue Diagnostics.  Cloud software can make digital solutions affordable and universally accessible and we should see a lot of interesting developments in this area in the near future. 

 ROI

Digital Health NOW Spotlight Report: The Evolving Field of Digital Pathology

February 26, 2012

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Digital Health NOW Spotlight Report: The Evolving Field of Digital Pathology" report to their offering.

"Digital pathology is a disruptive technology; however, the consensus is that digital pathology is clearly our future. This iteration of Branham's Digital Health NOW Spotlight report takes a look at the emerging Digital Pathology market segment in health care. The report provides an overview and a general understanding of Digital Pathology rather than a detailed discussion of underlying technologies and vendors.

Digital pathology is rapidly gaining momentum as a proven and essential technology that is helping to reduce laboratory expenses, improve operational efficiency, enhance productivity and improve treatment decisions and patient care. It is used worldwide in drug development, reference lab, hospital, and academic medical centre settings. Applications include education, research, image analysis, archival and retrieval, LIS/LIMS integration, secondary consultations and virtual slide sharing. However, widespread adoption of digital pathology has been hindered not only by cost and technical factors but also largely by the mind set of technophobic pathologists.

Key Topics Covered:

What is Digital Pathology?

  • Steps in Digital Pathology
  • Scanning
  • Quantitative Analysis and Computer-Assisted Image Data Mining
  • Pathology Image Management and Storage

Benefits of Digital Pathology

  • Dramatic Reduction in Misdiagnosis
  • Remote Diagnosis and Support
  • Educational Benefits

Market Trends

  • Evolving Market
  • Validation is Still Incomplete
  • Archival and Retrieval Systems
  • Regulatory Challenges
  • Sluggish Growth
  • Lack of Standards
  • Telepathology
  • Vendor Landscape

Final Thoughts

For more information visit: 

 http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/548166/digital_health_now

 

 

Visiopharm Introduces APPsolute Digital Pathology

February 24, 2012

Cloud computing and models using software as a service are increasingly being used on a "per use" or "per case" basis as similar stories related to cloud computing on this blog have appeared. 

It is getting increasingly harder to talk about software with folks without being asked "Is there an app for that?"  The reasons for this are many – lower cost, ease of use, minimal development needed and ready "out of the box" as well as potentially increased portability on small screen mobile devices, tablets and pads.

Now comes word from Visiopharm their entrance into this space with some patent pending technology to facilitate image analysis with free trial, low cost and lowered upfront costs to implement software locally and maintain.

Icon-140-appcenterIcon-140-appcenter 

For the clinical market, "per-click" models have been attempted on the hardware side in the past.  These models may create a

disincentive to use versus a larger initial investment as folks get charged per case, per slide or per view.  For software such as image analysis, however, this model makes a lot of sense.  Use what you need when you need it that is proven and reliable from a library of tried and true algorithms.  

If you need to customize, you can create on demand with lower cost, risk and demonstration of performance as you need it.

Dr. Grunkin's quote below pretty much sums this up by lowering many barriers to entry.

For more information on this new offering leverage hosted computing and per analysis offering, check out Visiopharm's webinar mentioned at the end of the below press release and their booth at the upcoming USCAP meeting.

APPsolute Digital Pathology offers a novel approach to Quantitative Digital Pathology. Powered by CloudAnalysis and the APPCenter; currently featuring over 25 ready-to-use Analysis Protocol Packages (APPs).

APPsolute Digital Pathology is a novel approach to Quantitative Digital Pathology (QDP); costs are reduced, the learning curve is minimized, and the common risks of adoption are eliminated. The Visiopharm APPCenter provides access to a library of solutions that are ready-to-run and can be used with minimum training. Analysis Protocol Packages (APPs) can be tested free of charge before investing, productivity is achieved immediately, the upfront costs are low, and solutions can be scaled to fit customer needs.

A Pay-As-You-Go Solution: Low upfront costs

CloudAnalysis and APPs provide a low cost, easy to budget solution for customers who need access to sophisticated image analysis capabilities for a specific amount of time. Whether it is a week, a month, or longer you only pay for analysis when you need it.

Michael Grunkin, PhD, President of Visiopharm, stated "Currently, the cost structure of commercially available deployed Quantitative Digital Pathology solutions prevents the majority of researchers from benefitting from this increasingly important technology. This has to change. With our CloudAnalysis the upfront investment can be reduced to a fraction of any existing deployed solution. With CloudAnalysis there is always access to the most recent software version, studies can be run from anywhere, and technical deployment issues are eliminated."

The patent pending APPCenter provides customers with easy access to an extensive library of ready-to-run APPs. Each APP includes detailed descriptions, references to scientific literature, illustrated examples, webinars, and more. There is no need to become an expert in image analysis; APPs are created and validated in collaboration between experts in the field and Visiopharm’s application scientists and programmers.

Customers try an APP free of charge, before investing, to make sure that 1) the APP is working according to specifications, 2) the APP provides useful results, and 3) the APP can be understood and operated.

APPs are purchased for a low fixed cost, are yours to keep, and will work with both Visiopharm’s DeployedAnalysis and CloudAnalysis solutions. Custom APPs can be developed upon request, at a fixed known cost, and are also risk free with a complimentary trial.

"In a research project involving 300 patients, we worked with Visiopharm’s Image Analysis APPs developed for five different biomarkers. We could work seamlessly on the cloud, we were productive within an hour or two of training, and were able to complete and review the analysis of 5 x 300 tissue specimens in less than a week. The results we achieved were at least as good as manual scoring, and in several cases significantly better. The speed, convenience, and cost structure offered by CloudAnalysis and Image APPs makes Quantitative Digital Pathology an efficient, affordable, and attractive research tool", says Dr. Lars D. Andersen, Associate Professor, Group Leader, Center for Molecular Clinical Cancer Research, Department of Molecular Medicine (MOMA).

Built on leading technology

CloudAnalysis provides instant access from work, home, or from anywhere to the complete suite of Visiopharm software solutions; including advanced image analysis and stereology. Simply log in to your secure account and start to analyze your slides locally or in the cloud.

CloudAnalysis is built upon proven Whole Slide image analysis technology. Johan Doré, CTO at Visiopharm says, "Our solutions have been stress-tested over the last 10 years in the most demanding environments when it comes to capabilities, automation, and throughput. The feedback we consistently get from the world’s most experienced and sophisticated Digital Pathology users is, that we provide solutions with a lower learning curve, lower cost of ownership, by far the lowest computational costs, while providing high quality results."

Visit Visiopharm’s new website at http://www.visiopharm.com to learn more about APPsolute Digital Pathology and [register] for an introductory webinar on March 14, 2012 at 11 AM EST titled “Squaring the Circle of Quantitative Digital Pathology: instant implementation, while increasing productivity and achieving a return on investment."  In this webinar Visiopharm will demonstrate this new generation of software for Quantitative Digital Pathology with a flexible, affordable method of delivery in the Cloud.

About Visiopharm

Over the past 10 years, Visiopharm image analysis and stereology software has become the preferred Quantitative Digital Pathology solution for leading biopharmaceutical companies, clinical researchers, and academic researchers all over the world. Visiopharm has more than 300 deployed systems worldwide and a large network of distribution and support partners, and is featured in over 400 scientific publications.

Source: Visiopharm


Specialists On Call Renews Joint Commission Accreditation

February 15, 2012

Courtesy of Business Wire:

Specialists On Call, Inc. (SOC), the nation's leading provider of clinical telemedicine, announced today that it has completed its 2012 Joint Commission review and maintained their accreditation. SOC provides hospitals nationwide with immediate 24/7 access to board certified specialty physicians via telemedicine and delivers over 1,500 emergency consultations each month.

"This is a very big deal for Specialists On Call," commented Dr. Joe Peterson, CEO of SOC. "We've always distinguished ourselves by the clinical quality we offer hospitals and renewing our Joint Commission accreditation validates that commitment to excellence. Completing this Joint Commission Survey with no findings is rare and furthers our leadership position within the industry."

Specialists On Call was the first free-standing and commercial telemedicine service to earn Joint Commission accreditation and this latest evaluation was SOC's third formal review. To date, SOC has helped more than 40,000 patients and their family members with time sensitive clinical consultations via telemedicine.

SOC's growth plan for 2012 includes multiple new telemedicine service lines that address the nation's growing specialty physician shortage. Last year Specialists On Call launched an emergency telepsychiatry service for hospitals that are hard pressed to provide 24/7/365 psychiatric on-call coverage in their emergency room. Thus far, the telepsychiatry service has produced six times the consult volume that SOC's long-established teleneurology service generated during its first year.

About Specialists On Call

Specialists On Call, Inc. (SOC), is a Joint Commission-accredited organization that is changing emergency medicine. As the leading provider of emergency telemedicine consultations, SOC gives hospitals vital 24/7/365 access to more than 50 board certified, fellowship trained academic specialists, each with a minimum of 10 years experience. With operations on both coasts, SOC provides more than 1,500 emergency consultations per month for hospitals nationwide and hospital systems such as Vanguard Health Systems, HCA, Inc. and Tenet Healthcare Corporation.

For more information please visit www.specialistsoncall.com

Source: Specialists On Call, Inc.

 

Blog App to be Launched

February 5, 2012

Coming to an iPhone near you soon.  The Digital Pathology Blog App.  Look for iPad and Android OS versions to follow.  Stay connected and up to date from your mobile device to the blog with Twitter (@tissuepathology) and Pathology 2.0 Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/pathology2.0) tabs.

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Regulators regulating digital scanners

January 24, 2012

In the words of Harry Caray – "Holy Cow!"  Karen Titus does an excellent job putting together this piece. Who else could use "Gentlemen, start your turtles", "Alan Greenspan" and also work in "From that perspective, a Class III, or even a Class II, classification, is overkill—like dropping a V8 engine into an Amish buggy" in the same article.

Turtle jockey

So much blog fodder here I have copied the entire article available for free from CAP Today with my comments below on some of my thoughts on this matter.

Courtesy of CAP Today - Regulators scanning the digital scanners by Karen Titus

A recent panel on whole-slide imaging launched a clear message from the Food and Drug Administration: The agency views WSI systems as Class III medical devices and plans to regulate them as such. Gentlemen, start your turtles.

- The FDA has about 1 million pages that are surprisingly easy to navigate on their website including a "How to Classify Your Device Page".  If I am reading this correctly, microscopes are Class I devices, as are colposcopes to diagnose cervical dysplasia and cancer, ditto for stethoscopes, holders for artificial heart valves and some defibrillators are Class 2 (roman numerals should only be used for really important things like Super Bowls). Defibrillators [CITE: 21CFR870.5300] are Class 2! 360 joules of energy that could save your life in a moment or cause death if you do not respond to the TV "CLEAR!". And a slide scanner is Class 3 because?  Oh, image quality, right. Apparently the FDA didn't look through the microscope I used today.  It was like rice crispies were stuck to the lenses. I am sure the article will provide clear detail on why and how these are Class 3 devices.  Let's read on.

While the FDA’s decision was clear, the next steps are anything but. Vendors, pathologists, the FDA, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could head in any number of directions next, but they won’t be moving swiftly. In fact, those who were at the meeting are still dissecting the information presented at the panel, as if Alan Greenspan had delivered one of his famously tortured pronouncements from the Federal Reserve.

- Yeah, but unemployment was lower, at a nadir (don't get to use that word often) of 4% in the 1990s.  Double digit unemployment, financial collapse, Greece, Spain, housing crisis, fall of Lehman, etc… he only predicted once he started doing stand up to not be forgotten when the oft jovial and always comical Bernake took the chairmanship. Those tortured pronouncements in retrospect weren't as bad as this.

Depending on one’s view, the news will slow efforts to bring WSI for primary diagnosis into U.S. laboratories, with some vendors looking to Europe for regulatory relief; have virtually no impact on large vendors, who, while not necessarily enamored of the FDA’s decision, concede it’s one they can live with; kill the market completely; choke innovation among vendors, especially component makers; possibly put laboratories in jeopardy if they try to validate these systems as laboratory-developed tests under CLIA; or encourage laboratories to use WSI for other, already approved purposes, readying themselves for the inevitable day when whole-slide imaging transforms surgical pathology.

- Sprechen Sie Deutsch? - Come è il tuo italiano?

- I predict no impact, no choking, killing, or jeopardy or pocket translators needed to replace US sales; pathologists are conservative folks with supportive industry innovators and inventors; we will test, test and re-test, then test again and we will transform safely and accurately. 

What most agree on is that for the first time, the FDA, which regulates the vendor portion of the vendor-laboratory equation, has “put a stake in the sand regarding digital pathology,” says David Wilbur, MD, professor of pathology, Harvard Medical School, and chair, CAP Technology Assessment Committee.

Note that the stake is in sand. “I suspect there’s going to be a whole lot of give-and-take that comes about in the future,” says Dr. Wilbur, who was in the audience at the panel discussion, held at the annual Digital Pathology Association meeting last fall in San Diego.

In a follow-up interview with CAP TODAY, the FDA’s presenter on the panel, Tremel Faison, noted that her remarks reflect the agency’s current thoughts on digital pathology as it works through the issues, rather than an official announcement. “We anticipate eventually having another public meeting, and/or publishing the guidance,” possibly in the next year, she says.

- I think a formal document would minimize confusion on this matter and time is of the essence, particularly since this issue was first addressed in public forum in October of 2009 and mention of pre-market requirements was stated at that time which are similar in many ways to slides and comments from a few months ago. 

Download Faison_DPDevicesPanelMeeting2009

Nonetheless, this was not the usual runic message coming out of a federal bureaucracy. Faison, a former cytotechnologist who is now a regulatory scientist in the FDA’s Office of In Vitro Diagnostics, drew praise from those at the meeting. “There was some clarity from the FDA,” says Walter H. Henricks, MD, who represented the CAP on the panel. Until now, he says, industry and labs have largely been in the dark about how the FDA planned to regulate WSI systems for primary diagnosis. “This was the biggest piece of news coming out of the panel — and it was a big piece of news, even if not entirely unexpected,” says Dr. Henricks, medical director, Center for Pathology Informatics, and staff pathologist, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic.

- A few editor's notes at this point: Tremel taught me everything I know about cytology as a pathology resident at The National Naval Medical Center (now The Walter Reed National Naval Medical Center) and I know she is doing what she can on this and we will all come out the other end better for doing so. I made some comments in November regarding what the CAP did, should have done and could do to help facilitate what is mentioned below as a several year process.  See:

http://www.tissuepathology.com/weblog/2011/11/did-the-cap-do-enough-for-digital-pathology-and-discussions-with-the-fda.html

http://www.tissuepathology.com/weblog/2011/12/what-pathologists-and-the-cap-can-do-to-assist-with-pma-process.html

The Class III label is used for devices the FDA deems as highest risk; to be approved, such devices require general controls (such as quality system regulation and good manufacturing procedures) and premarket approval. A lower level of clearance, Class II, refers to moderate risk devices that already have a predicate device on the market. The lowest-risk device, Class I, requires no pre-market notification.

Dr. Henricks sees no gain in dwelling on the FDA’s reasoning in classifying WSI systems as Class III. “The facts are what were presented,” says Dr. Henricks, who is also a member of the CAP’s Council on Accreditation and of the Diagnostic Intelligence and Health Information Technology Committee.

- In seeking absolute truth we aim at the unattainable and must be content with broken portions.

- One of the first duties of the physician is to educate the masses not to take medicine.

Sir William Osler

A couple of the larger vendors also show an unwillingness to engage in debate; they prefer to keep plugging away, like infantrymen, to bring their systems to market. The Class III announcement barely made them look up. And while it may have opened a door, no one expects to pass through it anytime soon. The last time the FDA participated in a public forum to discuss WSI regulation was 2009, says Dirk Soenksen, president of Aperio. At that time, observers say, the agency appeared to be gathering information. “Now, two years later, we’re finally able to hear some of the learnings they’ve digested. That shows you the pace at which FDA is working,” says Soenksen, who was at the recent DPA panel.

- A snail's pace?  Already used "turtle" twice in this post.  Besides, he beats the hare so not sure we are good using turtle (OK, 4 times in this post).

Soenksen says the Class III label didn’t surprise him. “But the fact that it surprised some shows you the confusion that exists in the marketplace,” he says.

The confusion exists even at the most basic level, particularly among those who think the FDA’s regulatory hand smacks a little too hard. Faison says she’s routinely asked about the agency’s reach by those who say the microscope isn’t regulated—and since it’s not, they argue, why should devices performing similar functions be tightly regulated? From that perspective, a Class III, or even a Class II, classification, is overkill—like dropping a V8 engine into an Amish buggy.

In fact, Faison explains, microscopes are regulated as Class I devices. That astounds some pathologists, who think, “Nobody regulates my microscope . Why would they regulate my scanner? It’s doing the same thing,” says Anil Parwani, MD, PhD, who spoke at the DPA meeting about the CAP’s recommendations for validating WSI. Digital pathology may be a familiar topic, having been around for a decade or so, but until now regulatory oversight hasn’t been a big part of the conversation.

That’s especially true at trade shows, says Dr. Parwani, where the mushrooming presence of digital devices over the last five years is devoid of anything as mundane as regulatory information. “Not many people know that FDA is even looking at regulating whole-slide imaging,” says Dr. Parwani, division director of pathology informatics, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Those who expected WSI systems to be Class II devices can debate all they want, Soenksen says, but, “That ship has sailed. They’ve made up their mind that this is a Class III, which is why most people are going to Europe with this technology, not the U.S.”

For vendors committed to the U.S. market, the pace to market will be somewhat stately. “You’re talking five years at the earliest when someone’s going to get an approval,” Soenksen says. “People don’t like to face up to that truth, but that’s the timeline.” The FDA will need to clear a vendor to do a clinical study; the vendor will need to do the study; and the FDA will have to approve the PMA.

- Propose 5 pathologists, 5,000 cases, 5 days to achieve "ground truth/panel/consensus disgnosis", then 5 different pathologists each looking at 1,000 cases on both screen and (exempt) microscopes with 5 week washout.  Get cheap monitors from BestBuy as to establish minimal technical equipment needed and microscopes with rice krispies dessicating on objectives, typical of many clinical laboratories to replicate "real life".  5 years too long.  Eli and Tom will be in the Superbowl again.

Faison declined to comment on when the FDA anticipated receiving vendor submissions.

- After football season is over and before baseball begins.  Also known as "February".

Aperio had been talking with the FDA about clinical studies even before the Class III announcement, and it hopes to have an acceptable study design soon. “We’re going to be the first company to get FDA approval,” Soenksen predicts.

Another large vendor, Omnyx, has been in talks with the FDA as well, says Michael Montalto, PhD, one of the company’s founders and vice president of clinical and regulatory affairs. The Class III billing didn’t surprise him, either. “We have a pretty good sense of what we need to do,” says Dr. Montalto, who also attended the panel. “But that’s not as a result of the announcement—it’s because of our continued back and forth with the FDA.”

Dr. Montalto puts a positive spin on the news. “The device will be safe when it comes out. You have to be happy about that.”

- The best interest of the patient is the only interest to be considered

William J. Mayo

Safety, after all, is at the heart of the Class III label. Listing the potential risks of WSI systems, Faison says, “We’re very concerned that the image quality is as good or better than when using the light microscope. Is it like that for all surgical pathology specimens or only for a segment of surgical pathology specimens? What are the differences in human interaction between viewing under the microscope and navigating on the computer screen?”

To answer such questions, the FDA will require clinical studies to validate performance. Here’s where confusion re-enters the room, forcing players to engage in, if not quite brinkmanship, at least a little blinkmanship.

It’s not clear, for example, what types of clinical studies vendors will need to conduct as part of their PMA submissions. Faison gave some general guidelines at the panel, but until the agency receives its first vendor submission, the FDA’s specific desires are likely to be a mystery. “We don’t have all the answers,” Faison says. The more specific vendors can be with their proposed clinical studies, observers say, the easier it will be for the agency to decide whether to grant a green light.

Another unanswered question: How broad or narrow can an intended use be? Will approval be given for diagnosing, say, breast cancer, but not colon cancer? Prostate biopsies but not endometrial biopsies? Or cancer, but not inflammatory skin conditions? “A huge question,” Dr. Henricks says. “I wish I could give you more clarity. I wish I could give me more clarity.”

“This is a tough question,” Faison says. “We don’t want to see a submission for just one organ system—say, breast.” That’s not a realistic intended use, she says, “and we realize that a laboratory would not buy for just that indication.

“On the other hand,” she continues, “performing a study for all of surgical pathology, including frozens, special stains, etc., would be one huge and hardly manageable submission. We are encouraging sponsors to take a hard look at how these devices will most likely be used in the laboratory, employ a ‘fit for purpose’ mentality, and frame their intended use (and therefore clinical studies) around that.” She adds that vendors will need to define the physical and technical characteristics, such as focus, resolution, and color, prior to beginning their clinical studies; in addition, they’ll need to look at what she calls a clinically balanced population.

- Paul Valenstein, MD I think gives the best talk on the issues raised in the last 6 paragraphs.  I heard him speak on these issues at a talk several of us gave at USCAP last year.

Download Valenstein_companion06handout

I recall something about needing 65,000 cases but not hemepath, cytology or pigmented lesions

Vendors are dropping few clues themselves. Regarding Aperio’s submission, “It will be as broad as FDA allows it to be,” Soenksen says, punctuating that sentence with laughter.

Vendors are struggling with this issue, Dr. Montalto says, and some are irked that they’ll need to make the first move. But he reminds his industry colleagues that this is a relatively new field. Previous summary statements and clearances aren’t useful guides; every device will have its own nuances, and it’s up to vendors to discuss them with the FDA. “I think they learn a lot from their discussion with vendors. They’re getting educated on this process, too,” he says.

While vendors and the agencies continue their parry, Soenksen sees an opportunity for pathologists to step up. “My personal view is the College needs to lead this,” he says. He suggests that the FDA is looking for cover from the pathology community—if pathologists, and the CAP, made it clear they support WSI and are ready to use it, he says, the FDA would feel more comfortable bringing the systems to market.

The FDA has also irked some pathologists, Dr. Montalto observes, though he speaks diplomatically, gently pointing out that the AP community, in comparison to CP and other clinical specialties, may be less familiar with the demands of bringing new technologies to the marketplace, including the regulatory environment and its requirements for technical validation and understanding the risk profiles of every device.

The FDA will look at the accuracy of the whole-slide imaging approach and the accuracy of the traditional light microscopy approach, comparing both to an adjudicated standard. This reference standard will likely be determined by a panel of three pathologists; agreement by two of the three creates the reference diagnosis. Dr. Wilbur’s preference would have been to consider the glass slide interpretation the de facto gold standard, and then compare digital to that. This approach is more in line with submitting a 510(k) rather than a PMA, showing essential equivalence to a similar, standard technology. “The glass slide is the current gold standard—this type of PMA approach tests not only WSI interpretation, but also the glass slide standard. It will be interesting to see how this sorts out. WSI could turn out to be better with this approach—who knows?” says Dr. Wilbur.

- A growing number of studies have shown superiority of virtual microscopy versus light microscopy (See: http://www.tissuepathology.com/weblog/2011/10/superiority-of-virtual-microscopy-versus-light-microscopy-in-transplantation-pathology.html)

- This could be bad for microscope manufacturers and what about all the diagnoses made on these barbarian, exempt devices?

The FDA’s approach also requires a so-called washout period, during which the pathologist theoretically forgets the initial diagnosis before making a diagnosis on the second technology. “How long do you need to make the study not biased?” Faison asks. “I think randomizing the read order may help with that.”

- I may not remember your name, but I never forget a face.  Excuse me, have we met somewhere before?  But if you change the read order you already know that the first case is not the first case, or the last the last, unless of course it actually is which sounds like something Dr. House would say but most of us know if you are playing Monopoly and you are the thimble and on Connecticut Avenue and roll a nine then you go to Tennesse Avenue and a subsequent 7 puts you on B&O railroad and 8 more gets you Community Chest.  With enough cases (see reference to 65,000 cases above), this might work.

If all this sounds familiar, that’s because it’s similar to the FDA’s approach to regulating automated cytology, says Dr. Wilbur. But it may be more problematic for WSI systems, he says, especially the washout period. “Cytology slides are more difficult to remember, but I would suspect that memory of surgical pathology specimens will be more difficult to wash out,” he says. The FDA’s proposed washout period is a week minimum, Faison says, though she adds that two to three weeks would be optimal. (A CAP workgroup on WSI validation said it has found no widely accepted washout length and has recommended a three-week period.)

- Propose minimum of 2 weeks.  Absolute minimum.  More than 3 weeks ideal. Increases the chances the slides could be lost, broken, misfiled, destroyed or reused. Usually still in the pathologists office for 2 weeks and cannot be uncovered or identifed as broken or destroyed.

“In addition,” queries Dr. Wilbur, “what about other important aspects of a surgical pathology case?” Compared to cervical cytology, he says, where each case has only one reference diagnosis, surgical pathology specimens may have many aspects to test. In addition to a diagnosis of, say, colon cancer, the pathologist is also expected to grade the cancer, assess the margins, the depth of invasion, and so on. If these parts of the case do not match, how will the FDA handle that? Such patient care issues will make design of the studies potentially complicated, he says.

Beyond this, Dr. Wilbur fears that the FDA’s proposed studies will be too expensive and too difficult for smaller companies to conduct. With the advantage falling to larger companies, it could curb innovation.

He’s particularly concerned about how component makers will fit into the picture. Right now, they don’t. The FDA regards WSI as a system, and that’s the regulatory pathway it’s providing. Dr. Montalto suggests the FDA will eventually take another look at this. But near term, it will likely have a chilling effect on component providers, Soenksen says.

Some fear the decision could be stifling. Pathologists won’t be able to mix and match components as they see fit, and large vendors will have little if any incentive to design flexible systems. “What the FDA presented is the easiest solution,” says Dr. Wilbur, who wants more thought devoted to this issue. How will makers of scanners, image-management systems, or viewing stations break into the primary interpretation market? “They’ll be left out in the cold. This has to be addressed.”

Dr. Wilbur’s concerns point to another mudslide in the making. By recognizing WSI as a system, rather than individual components, the FDA also stated it did not see whole-slide imaging as a laboratory-developed test, which originates in the lab and is put together from initial components. Where does that leave labs that want to validate a non-approved WSI system?

“I’m doing my best to piece this together,” says Dr. Henricks, who adds that the matter has now been tipped into CMS’ lap. “What is CMS going to do about this if they find a laboratory using it? What if the laboratory has done a good validation for its intended use in the lab? What happens?”

- Take home message: We are not actually talking about regulators regulating whole slide scanners (without a predicate device), we are actually talking about regulating whole slide systems.  Entire ecosystems – stainers?, scanners, monitors, servers, viewers, pathologists?

It’s not hard to extrapolate further and ask about the implications for CAP inspectors enforcing CLIA. The answers could be scary.

“It’s a panic issue right now,” says Dr. Parwani.

- A perfection of means, and confusion of aims, seems to be our main problem.

Albert Einstein

Attempts to clarify matters further at the panel failed, attendees and panel members say. It wasn’t clear, for example, whether WSI systems that have already received FDA clearance for select use (for example, automated image analysis of breast markers) or for research use only can be validated as LDTs, Dr. Henricks says. FDA regulates manufacturers of medical devices, whereas CMS/ CLIA regulates testing that occurs in clinical laboratories. “I think sometimes it’s a misperception that the FDA directly regulates clinical laboratories, outside of blood bank,” Dr. Henricks says.

Dr. Montalto says that in his conversations with the FDA, the agency appears understandably uncomfortable with the idea of labs employing WSI systems for off-label use. He says the potential for this is a major reason the FDA wants vendors to move quickly on their submissions, so the devices can be proven safe for their intended uses.

- I hope not too quickly here we still need another public meeting and possibly a guidance document possibly in the next year.

Dr. Henricks makes it clear that the CAP accreditation program is not taking a public position on this and will harmonize with the FDA and CLIA and their requirements. “We look to them for some guidance on how to approach this topic,” he says. At the same time, he says, it appears that the CMS would welcome input from the CAP on how to address WSI for clinical purposes.

- I recognize CAP is in a tough spot here and everyone is looking to everyone else for guidance. Please give these folks enough guidance to make the decisions we need them to make. A blocked path also offers guidance.  (Last 2 lines with apologies to Mason Cooley and Jimmy Johnson.  Who else can use these 2 names in the same sentence, huh?). See if CMS would welcome input from the CAP on additional billing codes for some of these services.

In the meantime, the CAP has already begun addressing WSI via the aforementioned workgroup, which was convened by the College’s Pathology and Laboratory Quality Center. The group (Dr. Parwani and Dr. Henricks are members) put together 13 draft statements for laboratories that want to validate WSI systems. The CAP currently has no accreditation program checklists on WSI validation, but the recommendations might be part of a future such checklist.

- The only question then is who drives this may be, could be, future such checklist, The College’s Pathology and Laboratory Quality Center, CAP’s Council on Accreditation, Diagnostic Intelligence and Health Information Technology Committee or The CAP Technology Assessment Committee. I think a committee should be formed to organize these committees.  

The CMS representative on the panel, Debra Sydnor, CT(ASCP), says CLIA is interested in the workgroup’s recommendations. “That is very helpful to us,” she says. But it’s hard to know how that interest will translate into practical action and, ultimately, regulatory compliance.

- One should avoid using the terms "practical" and "regulatory" in the same sentence.  Kind of like saying "Notre Dame" and "football" for the past decade and a half.  It doesn't sound right.  And are we talking about regulations or compliance with said regulations.

Ideally, labs should consider holding off on using WSI for clinical purposes until a system has FDA approval for the appropriate intended use, says Sydnor, cytologist, CMS Division of Laboratory Services. She realizes this is a quixotic notion. Sydnor says she’s been fielding calls from laboratories that intend to use—or are already using—WSI for testing that involves H&E. Most of the questions concern the holder of the CLIA certificate—i.e. where is the final testing done?—rather than validation. For CLIA purposes, the pathology test is the specimen grossing and the microscopic slide interpretation; therefore, the location where they are performed must have the appropriate CLIA certificate and meet the applicable requirements.

- Increasingly grossing/histology services are becoming consolidated and where the tissue is grossed and slide read are different facilities. And a third location could be where the image being used to render the diagnosis is reviewed.  

She advises laboratories to look to CLIA regulation 42 CFR 493.1253 for guidance regarding off-label use of the device under CLIA, but notes that additional formal guidance, specific to WSI, will be forthcoming from the agency.

- Until then go to http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/cfr_2010/octqtr/pdf/ 42cfr493.1254.pdf for the aforementioned reference above.

What will happen if a CLIA inspector encounters a laboratory using WSI for clinical purposes? The lab will have to demonstrate appropriate validation, policies and procedures, and other CLIA-related quality assurance practices, as it would for any test, she says, but that’s not the end of the story. “This will involve training and instruction within CLIA,” Sydnor says. “This area of automation is all new to them [CLIA inspectors] as well.”

- What?  Level of automation? What level of automation? Validate the slide scanning, disk spinning, pixel transfer?  What is being manufactured that will reduce the need for hard physical labor and/or monotonous work.  We are actually adding additional steps and work and effort in this process.  What humans are being replaced by what instrumentation that would justify the sheer mention of "automation".

She makes clear that CLIA is neither granting permission nor encouraging laboratories to use WSI imaging for clinical purposes right now. At the same time, “CLIA is not out to witch hunt anyone,” she says. “We basically want to know what you’re doing, how you’re ensuring quality testing, and what it is you’d like to do.” Like everyone else at the table, she says, CLIA is seeking data about how well, and how safely, these systems perform.

- Translation: We work for the government and we are here to help.  We are not saying that you can't, but we are not saying that you can either.

Meanwhile, what’s a less-adventurous lab to do?

A surprising amount, as it turns out. As Dr. Henricks notes, digital pathology remains viable for uses other than primary diagnosis, including quality assurance, secondary consultations, education and research, and automated image analysis.

Labs should continue using WSI in approved ways, Dr. Parwani says, which will let them move quickly once the systems earn approval for primary diagnostic use. Here the CAP working group guidelines will be valuable, he says, since they’re extensively annotated and draw on available data as well as user experience. Labs can use the guidelines to ensure they have all the components in place and the right workflow as they prepare for the eventual shift to WSI.

- In 5 years we can jump on this right away.

Dr. Wilbur and his colleagues mostly use WSI for continuing education, but in mid-December they inked a contract with an image-management system company, setting them up to do what he calls “intramural” consultation. This will allow pathologists to share cases in the system across multiple desktops, including those at regional affiliates, and enable second opinion consultations to flow into the institution from outside sources.

At UPMC, Dr. Parwani and his colleagues continue to use digital pathology, as they have for the past couple of years, for education, research, QA, and getting opinions from colleagues. They use it for image analysis of breast markers, and they are starting to accept consults from other countries and institutions for second opinions. “We’re trying to use it for all the intended uses that are approved,” he says. They’re participating with a vendor in clinical trials to prepare its system for premarket approval, and their interest in primary diagnostic use looms large. “Most of our pathologists are very comfortable with looking at digital images and looking at digital slides,” he says.

- Who mentioned anything related to pathologists actually being able to read these images and help providers take care of people.  When was pathologists abilities to do their jobs to the best of their abilities with the right training, experience and equipment discussed in this process? You mean pathologists can actually do this today? Read images?  Like through a microscope?  Or a gross photo?  Or an electron micrograph?

“There are so many things you can do,” he adds. “This should not stop your march toward digital pathology.” The DPA panel, in his view, was merely one step in the process. He, like Dr. Montalto, even sees it as a positive one. “FDA is looking at it, and we’re going to have a good product in the end.”

- “Everything will be all right in the end. If it’s not all right, then it’s not the end.”

 Karen Titus is CAP TODAY contributing editor and co-managing editor.

Of the FDA’s decision to regulate whole-slide imaging systems as Class III devices, Aperio president Dirk Soenksen says, “They’ve made up their mind. . . . You’re talking five years at the earliest when someone’s going to get approval.” How broad will Aperio’s submission be? “As broad as FDA allows,” he says.

 

Faison

 

Dr. Henricks

 

Dr. Montalto

 

Dr. Wilbur

 

Dr. Parwani

Pathology Labs Replace Microscopes with Digital Imaging

January 4, 2012
By Labmedica International staff writers
Posted on 29 Dec 2011
 

Non-US deployment of Aperio platform with image storage on a Hitachi platform.  400,000 glass slides annually at a rate of 300 TB of storage per year.  Very cool. Look for more adoption overseas this year.  

Microscopes are being replaced with digital imaging in pathology laboratories in the southern part of Sweden.

Traditional microscope glass slides are turned into digital images, which are then analyzed by pathologists directly from the computer screen, instead of using regular microscopes.

The revolution, which has already occurred in radiology, is now taking place in pathology. The contracted delivery not only digitizes the slides but also will completely renew IT support for all workflows of the pathology laboratories in the Skåne region.

Labvantage (Somerset, NJ, USA) will deliver a USD 4 million turnkey solution for digitizing the histopathological workflows in the whole region. The system will be possibly the largest such installation in the world and among the first of its kind in northern Europe. The digital slides will reside in Hitachi’s (Tokyo, Japan) Content Platform, which employs distributed object storage. All of the images will be kept well protected and duplicated across several physical discs. This makes the traditional backing up of data unnecessary.

Currently the four pathology laboratories run by Region Skåne produce about 400,000 histological microscope slides a year. The samples are prepared into microscope slides and are then physically distributed to pathologists. Slides are then analyzed using regular microscopes. There is currently limited IT support for the workflow, making it difficult to track the status of pending cases and to identify the bottlenecks in the production workflow.

The difficulties in this method are mostly related to physical slides, which can only reside–and be analyzed–in one place at a time. With the digital pathology in place, all pathologists from all laboratories of Skåne can gain access to all cases and related slides. Together with the introduction of digital pathology, another goal of Region Skåne is to introduce so-called LEAN workflows.

The digitizing will not only ease the distribution of slides for the pathologists’ viewing but will also solve the needs for storage. Swedish law requires Region Skåne to keep all slides for a minimum of 20 years, and today this requires a lot of physical space. It is also difficult to retrieve a particular case from the archive. In the digitized format, the annual production of about 400,000 glass slides will consume 300 terabytes of storage each year.

The unique changeover both in its scope and in scale is to be supplied by Software Point. A key component in the delivery is a new workflow management system, which will manage both the preanalytical and analytical stages of the laboratory process. An adapted version of Software Point’s (Espoo, Finland) C5 LIMS will be in total charge of managing the workflows and tracking all events within. It will maintain a real-time status of each sample, slide, and case, and will ease the work of both laboratory technicians and pathologists with advanced functionalities such as integration to laboratory automation, datamatrix labeling of all objects, and speech recognition for pathologists.

"This is an important milestone for us. Our workflow-centric C5 LIMS, complemented with the best of breed systems from Aperio (Vista, CA, USA) and Hitachi, make up a solution unlike anything else on the market. We see tremendous potential in digital pathology and this is one key element in our strategy for further expanding the position of our LIMS in the healthcare marketplace," comments Andrea Holmberg, CEO of Software Point.

Related Links:

Labvantage
Software Point
Aperio

 


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