Using an ISI-developed new grid computing system,
physicians at 40 hospitals
all over North America are now quickly and easily exchanging
high-resolution medical images. One hoped-for result will be that the doctors of young cancer
patients will know more quickly whose treatment is not
working and be able to change course. Others include
making second opinions from specialists anywhere easily
available; and quicker, closer monitoring of ongoing clinical
research and diagnostic practice.
"We have broken the medical image communication barrier,"
says Stephan Erberich, (below) a computer scientist
who
is the
Director of Functional Imaging and Biomedical Informatics at
Childrens Hospital Los Angeles and a faculty member of both
the USC Keck School of Medicine and the USC Viterbi School
of Engineering.
He demonstrated the Globus MEDICUS system at the
annual meeting of the Radiological Society of
North America (RSNA) in Chicago Nov. 26-30.
The system is working at the 13-institution New
Approaches to Neuroblastoma
Therapy consortium (NANT), supported by a grant from
the Children's Neuroblastoma Cancer Foundation
(http://cncf-childcancer.org), and
also at the 27-member Children's Oncology Group
(CURESEARCH).
The Globus MEDICUS project makes pediatric cancer
researchers and the medical imaging profession at large the
latest in the rapidly growing number of scientific and
professional communities using Globus open-source grid
collaboration software developed at the USC Viterbi School
of Engineering's Information Sciences Institute (ISI) and
Argonne National Laboratories (ANL).
Carl Kesselman and Ann Chevernak of ISI, who worked with
Erberich in creating MEDICUS, built the system basing
themselves directly upon earlier work by the Digital Imaging
and Communication In Media (DICOM) standards
committee.
DICOM created a uniform electronic format for medical
images, one that allow the whole range of commercial
imaging devices - X-ray, MRI, and CT - to display and
manage images from any other.
But DICOM's potential for transparent exchange between
collaborating researchers, and physicians has so far not
been realized, because of technological, administrative, and
security challenges of confidential patient data, according to
Erberich.
As a result, access to the interchangeable data was limited
to the hospital where the images are acquired - not even
available to a patient's point-of-care facility, if different,
unless physically carried there.
"Today if you leave the hospital, you either leave your
digitized images behind or you have to carry them on a
CDROM," said Erberich. "This is not the 21st century
healthcare we need in a networked society. All kinds of
other fields, from banking to air travel now rely on instant
information exchange and decision making online. We should
be able expect the same level of sophistication in
healthcare."
That day has now arrived, says the scientist. Using the
DICOM Grid Interface Service (DGIS) DICOM records at
medical facility anywhere are now easily accessible and
exchangeable over Grid-secured Internet connections.
The MEDICUS project began when Erberich approached
ISI
grid experts Kesselman and Chervenak asking them "to
translate DICOM into Grid," as Erberich described it.
Kesselman had, as part of the Globus project, previously
helped more than a dozen scientific communities ranging
from high-energy physicists to earthquake simulating
engineers and geologists share instruments and data,
securely and easily.
He immediately saw that the need was a perfect fit for
Globus open-source Grid solution. "There had to be new
code developed to handle the medical-specific things like
DICOM translation and patient confidentiality assurance,"
Kesselman said, "but the cool thing is this leverages all of
the existing underlying Globus technology that we use in so
many other projects."
In creating key grid components for MEDICUS, ISI research
scientist Chervenak and Kesselman, who is director of the
center for grid technologies at ISI and a research associate
professor of computer science in the USC Viterbi School of
Engineering worked with Manasee Bhandekar, a computer
engineer at the USC Alfred E. Mann Institute. ISI
researchers Robert Schuler, Shishir Bharathi and Gaurang
Mehta also made significant contributions.
FUJIFILM Medical Systems provided a Synapse PACS and
Workstation software for the project.
Erberich developed the DICOM to Grid interface and led the
inter-disciplinary collaboration between the engineering and
clinical teams, working with Childrens Hospital radiologist-in-
chief and Chairman Marvin D. Nelson. (right)
The system has been in place since September, and as
Nelson describes it, "it's totally transparent. Each facility is
now connected to the Grid, using its own interface -- you
only have to one interface at the hospital, and that serves
the whole hospital, reusing the hospital's capital investment
in DICOM visualization devices."
The cost of installing a DGIS node is "trivial," said Erberich:
on the order of $1000 for a Grid gateway, attached to a
high-bandwidth net connection. The gateway provides two-
way access to the Grid, allowing upload of local images
(after de-identification) and also continuing access to a
catalog of archived DICOM records. "The nice thing, " said
Nelson, "if a researcher has authorization for a specific
record in the catalog, it can be downloaded for use on her
own image display."
One dramatic change in practice will be the ease of review.
Researchers can look at observations made anywhere on
the grid without leaving their offices.
"We store the images here in the Data Center, " said
Erberich, "but the people who have been assigned to review
images, can review them from virtually anywhere."
(MEDICUS server, right)
"Before" he continued "when we were documenting a
research study, it meant that radiologists would have to
physically come to a single facility and look through a file
cabinet full of physical images. Now, radiologists all over the
planet can look at the images at their leisure in their own
offices, on their own favorite commercial medical imaging
system."
One critical advantage of this is elimination of backlogs
reviewing images, with potentially life-saving results for
patients in studies. "We'll probably have a more timely
review of scans," said Robert C. Seeger, M.D., of the Saban
Research Institute of Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, a
specialist in neuroblastoma who is part of the Children's
Oncology Group
research groups now using the system.
Both the doctors and the computer scientists involved expect
this number to skyrocket in coming years, because the entry
cost is so low and the possibilities are only beginning to be
tapped. Other advantages include:
&bull Greatly increased ease of radiological consultation and
study. Any radiologist practicing on rare or unusual
conditions can now see only see the small fraction of the
total cases that present in one place. Now, "he could sit in
Boston and potentially review every single case, from
anywhere in the country," says Seeger.
&bull Imaging research. Scientists studying new techniques will
be able to exchange samples instantly. And "we can develop
expertise not just for reading, but also processing images,"
said Erberich.
&bull Drug development. New techniques depend on imaging
experimental animals, typically mice, using bioluminescent
markers. Analysis of large bodies of such images requires
great computing power. Grid techniques can both share
images and the computing power necessary to extract their
meaning.
The Globus Alliance is a community of organizations and
individuals developing fundamental technologies behind the
"Grid," which lets people share computing power, databases,
instruments, and other on-line tools securely across
corporate, institutional, and geographic boundaries without
sacrificing local autonomy.
Grid computing work has been named one of "Ten
Technologies that Will Change the World" by M.I.T.
Technology Review, and has received a "Top 100" award as
well as a "Most Promising New Technology" honor from R D
Magazine.
In addition to the NANT-system support by the
Children's Neuroblastoma Cancer Foundation
MEDICUS also received funding from the
NIH
(grant UO1-BA97452).
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