Title: PPT Template for Diagnostic Imaging
1What is Canada doing about Lossy Compression?
Peter R.G. Bak, Ph.D. Project Director,
Diagnostic Imaging and Laboratory
Architecture Canada Health Infoway 15 February,
2006
2Disclosures
- Peter R.G. Bak is a consultant working for Canada
Health Infoway
3Lossy Compression in Canada
- Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR) have
endorsed the use of lossy compression in
principle - CAR intends to fully endorse lossy compression as
a standard of practice by end of 2006 - Confirm that lossy compression does not impact
visual quality through clinical evaluation - Develop practice/ratio guidelines to assist
radiologists/health authorities with
implementation
4Context The Motivation for Compression
- Canada has initiated the deployment of a
pan-Canadian interoperable Electronic Health
Record solution (EHRs) - Canada Health Infoway (Infoway) is an
independent, not for profit corporation
responsible for developing the architecture of
the EHRs - A core component of a patients health record is
the diagnostic imaging result medical images,
radiology reports and evidence documents - Canada is moving aggressively towards a fully
filmless medical imaging environment we want to
print less than 2 of our exams
5Context The Motivation for Compression
- Canada performs about 35,000,000 exams annually
- This equates to about 3.5PB of storage annually
- We have an aging population expect an increase
in exam volume and CT utilization - Canadian healthcare facilities are widely
dispersed across a large geography - Over 540 facilities (lt100 beds) in rural Canada
- Network connectivity is limited most rural
areas have 1mbps connectivity - Canadian Radiologists and Specialists are
centered in the larger metropolitan cities - The challenge is getting images from rural
facilities to metropolitan centres in a timely
manner
6Context The Motivation for Compression
- Storage Costs
- Storage costs are coming down but the storage
volume is going up - We expect consumption increase will offset price
decrease - Storage costs are significant (50M) but not
significant enough to drive change! - Storage Total Cost of Ownership is far more
significantenough to drive change! - Infoway is completing an economic assessment that
indicates significant cost savingsyet to be
completed and published! - Network Costs
- Increasing bandwidth to rural areas is practical
up to 5mbps (more or less) - Increasing bandwidth to rural areas at rates of
100mbps is not going to happen in the foreseeable
future - Compression will have a positive impact on
quality of care and cost
7Challenging the Status Quo
- Lossy compression does NOT degrade image quality
and can be used safely in daily practice!
8The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Commissioned 2 independent reviews of the
literature - To assess the degree of research conducted in the
evaluation of lossy compression - To determine whether a consensus of opinion
exists among those who have evaluated the effect
of lossy compression on diagnostic image quality - Conclusion
- Lossy compression is a clinically acceptable
option for the compression of medical images - The extent of allowable lossy compression ratio
is dependent on the modality of the image and the
nature of the imaged pathology and anatomy
9The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Commissioned 2 independent legal reviews
- To assess the legal risk of adopting lossy
compression - Conclusion
- If the professional body adopts lossy compression
as a standard of practice, and - If institutions deem the use of lossy compression
provides economic and practical operational
benefits as well as contributes to better quality
care, - Then the exposure to legal risk is no greater
than with current practice. - The key presumption, however, is that the use of
lossy compression does not impact the visual
quality of an image
10The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Commissioned 1 regulatory review
- To assess regulatory constraints in Canada, USA,
EU and Australia - Conclusion
- No statements preventing or endorsing the use of
irreversible compression - Commissioned an economic analysis
- To assess the financial benefit to Canada in
using lossy compression - Conclusion
- Potential storage cost savings of C100 million
annually
11The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Commissioned clinical evaluation
- To assess the impact of lossy compression on
visual quality - To develop guidelines for use of lossy
compression within Canada - In Progresscompletion targeted for end 2006
12The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Evaluation Project Scope
- Evaluate the impact of JPEG and JPEG 2000 lossy
compression at safe compression ratios - Large matrix images 251
- Small matrix images 101
- Evaluation Project Protocol
- Diagnostic accuracy with ROC analysis
- Original Revealed First Choice Just Noticeable
Difference - 27 different sessions, with 3 reviewers for each
- 81 radiologists from all across Canada
- Sample size for each session will be 60 to 80
images. - 5 modalities CR/DR, CT, US, MR, NM
- 7 radiological areas Angio, Body, Breast, Chest,
MSK, Neuro, Pediatrics)
13The Canadian Approach to Driving Change
- Solicited Regional Health Authority
Administrations - To declare the use of lossy compression a matter
of public policy and resource allocation - In Progress
- Fraser Health Authority (largest HA in Canada)
has made such a declaration - In discussion with Provincial Health Ministries
14Conclusion
- We expect CAR to formally endorse lossy
compression as a standard of practice by year end - We expect most Provincial health ministries to
declare the use of lossy compression as a matter
of public policy and resource allocation by end
of 2007 - We will declare DICOM JPEG, JPEG2000 and JPIP as
pan-Canadian standards - Canada has a Standards Collaboration Process for
declaring standards for the pan-Canadian EHR - We will implement a reference system to serve as
- An open source test harness
- A standards compliance tool
15Questions?