%0 Journal Article %T Training radiology residents to evaluate deep myometrial invasion in endometrial cancer patients on MRI: A learning curve study. %A Stanzione A %A Cerrone F %A Ferraro F %A Menna F %A Spina A %A Danzi R %A Cuocolo R %A Scaglione M %A Liuzzi R %A Camera L %A Brunetti A %A Maurea S %A Paolo Mainenti P %J Eur J Radiol %V 177 %N 0 %D 2024 Jun 7 %M 38875749 %F 4.531 %R 10.1016/j.ejrad.2024.111546 %X OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of a four-month training program on radiology residents' diagnostic accuracy in assessing deep myometrial invasion (DMI) in endometrial cancer (EC) using MRI.
METHODS: Three radiology residents with limited EC MRI experience participated in the training program, which included conventional didactic sessions, case-centric workshops, and interactive classes. Utilizing a training dataset of 120 EC MRI scans, trainees independently assessed subsets of cases over five reading sessions. Each subset consisted of 30 scans, the first and the last with the same cases, for a total of 150 reads. Diagnostic accuracy metrics, assessment time (rounded to the nearest minute), and confidence levels (using a 5-point Likert scale) were recorded. The learning curve was obtained plotting the diagnostic accuracy of the three trainees and the average over the subsets. Anatomopathological results served as the reference standard for DMI presence.
RESULTS: The three trainees exhibited heterogeneous starting point, with a learning curve and a trend to more homogeneous performance with training. The diagnostic accuracy of the average trainee raised from 64 % (56 %-76 %) to 88 % (80 %-94 %) across the five subsets (p < 0.001). Reductions in assessment time (5.92 to 4.63 min, p < 0.018) and enhanced confidence levels (3.58 to 3.97, p = 0.12) were observed. Improvements in sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were noted, particularly for specificity which raised from 56 % (41 %-68 %) in the first to 86 % (74 %-94 %) in the fifth subset (p = 0.16). Although not reaching statistical significance, these advancements aligned the trainees with literature performance benchmarks.
CONCLUSIONS: The structured training program significantly enhanced radiology residents' diagnostic accuracy in assessing DMI for EC on MRI, emphasizing the effectiveness of active case-based training in refining oncologic imaging skills within radiology residency curricula.