Conversion of Radiology Reporting Templates to the MRRT Standard

In 2013, the Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) Radiology workgroup developed the Management of Radiology Report Templates (MRRT) profile, which defines both the format of radiology reporting templates using an extension of Hypertext Markup Language version 5 (HTML5), and the transportation mechanism to query, retrieve, and store these templates. Of 200 English-language report templates published by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), initially encoded as text and in an XML schema language, 168 have been converted successfully into MRRT using a combination of automated processes and manual editing; conversion of the remaining 32 templates is in progress. The automated conversion process applied Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation (XSLT) scripts, an XML parsing engine, and a Java servlet. The templates were validated for proper HTML5 and MRRT syntax using web-based services. The MRRT templates allow radiologists to share best-practice templates across organizations and have been uploaded to the template library to supersede the prior XML-format templates. By using MRRT transactions and MRRT-format templates, radiologists will be able to directly import and apply templates from the RSNA Report Template Library in their own MRRT-compatible vendor systems. The availability of MRRT-format reporting templates will stimulate adoption of the MRRT standard and is expected to advance the sharing and use of templates to improve the quality of radiology reports.

[1]  D. Larson,et al.  Improving consistency in radiology reporting through the use of department-wide standardized structured reporting. , 2013, Radiology.

[2]  Srini Tridandapani,et al.  Digitization of medicine: how radiology can take advantage of the digital revolution. , 2013, Academic radiology.

[3]  P. Parizel,et al.  The radiology report as seen by radiologists and referring clinicians: results of the COVER and ROVER surveys. , 2011, Radiology.

[4]  C. Langlotz RadLex: a new method for indexing online educational materials. , 2006, Radiographics : a review publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc.

[5]  Clement J. McDonald,et al.  Development of the Logical Observation Identifier Names and Codes (LOINC) vocabulary. , 1998, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA.

[6]  Charles E. Kahn,et al.  An Open-Standards Grammar for Outline-Style Radiology Report Templates , 2012, Journal of Digital Imaging.

[7]  Eaton Lin,et al.  Efficacy of a Checklist-Style Structured Radiology Reporting Template in Reducing Resident Misses on Cervical Spine Computed Tomography Examinations , 2014, Journal of Digital Imaging.

[8]  E. Burnside,et al.  Toward best practices in radiology reporting. , 2009, Radiology.

[9]  H. Hricak,et al.  Improving Communication of Diagnostic Radiology Findings through Structured Reporting 1 , 2011 .

[10]  Chris L. Sistrom,et al.  Conceptual Approach for the Design of Radiology Reporting Interfaces: The Talking Template , 2005, Journal of Digital Imaging.

[11]  Roy T. Fielding,et al.  Principled design of the modern Web architecture , 2000, Proceedings of the 2000 International Conference on Software Engineering. ICSE 2000 the New Millennium.

[12]  C. McDonald,et al.  LOINC, a universal standard for identifying laboratory observations: a 5-year update. , 2003, Clinical chemistry.

[13]  Daniel K. Powell,et al.  State of structured reporting in radiology, a survey. , 2015, Academic radiology.

[14]  Don K. Dennison,et al.  REST Enabling the Report Template Library , 2013, Journal of Digital Imaging.

[15]  Bin Zhang,et al.  Creation and Implementation of Department-Wide Structured Reports: An Analysis of the Impact on Error Rate in Radiology Reports , 2014, Journal of Digital Imaging.

[16]  Daniel L. Rubin,et al.  Creating and Curating a Terminology for Radiology: Ontology Modeling and Analysis , 2008, Journal of Digital Imaging.