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The Radiology Scientific Expert Panel

2020; Radiological Society of North America; Volume: 296; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1148/radiol.2020204005

ISSN

1527-1315

Autores

Linda Moy, David A. Bluemke,

Tópico(s)

Radiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging

Resumo

HomeRadiologyVol. 296, No. 2 PreviousNext CommunicationsFree AccessFrom the EditorThe Radiology Scientific Expert PanelLinda Moy, David BluemkeFor the Radiology Editorial BoardLinda Moy, David Bluemke, For the Radiology Editorial BoardLinda MoyDavid BluemkeFor the Radiology Editorial BoardPublished Online:Feb 27 2020https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2020204005MoreSectionsPDF ToolsImage ViewerAdd to favoritesCiteTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked In In this issue of Radiology, Dr Jeff Kanne and coauthors present their updated information for radiologists regarding COVID-19 (1), presenting a brief synopsis of the imaging literature on COVID-19 in relationship to use of chest CT. The basis for this inaugural Radiology Scientific Expert Panel statement was an extraordinary number of research manuscripts submitted over the last several weeks on novel coronavirus (nCoV) emerging from Wuhan, China, later renamed COVID-19.With the emergence of chest CT to detect COVID-19 infection, Radiology has received more than 230 manuscripts on COVID-19 alone in the past 4 weeks. To put these numbers into perspective, we receive that number of manuscripts on all topics throughout the entire field of radiology over a typical 4 week period.The standard academic peer process of publication is slow; authors know time from submission to publication can take 6–12 months. Although this journal has developed methods to shorten the time to publication for priority topics (called “fast track”), prior Radiology publications on Ebola or SARS infections still took up to 3 months to appear online.We determined that our existing processes for publication were insufficient to rapidly respond to a fast-progressing infectious disease. At the same time, we saw a more than 10-fold increase in reviewer and editorial staff burden for manuscripts on COVID-19. In response, our editorial board developed and put in place new processes for rapid editorial and peer review for COVID-19 manuscripts, along with daily briefings of editorial board, publication, and marketing staff.Beginning in June 2019, our Radiology editorial board retreat focused on a gap in our field pertaining to emerging areas of radiologic imaging. There is often insufficient information in the literature for well-formed medical guidelines, and niche topics—of critical importance to developing fields—may flounder due to lack of consensus or guidelines. Our editorial board conceived of a Radiology Scientific Expert Panel to take on such topics. This idea was presented to our full editorial board at the RSNA Annual Meeting in 2019.In the case of COVID-19, the Radiology Scientific Expert Panel went one step further. Expert panel members provided ultra-rapid peer review (within 24 hours) of the most promising COVID-19 imaging research. The Expert Review panel was overseen by Dr Jeff Kanne at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and coordinated by Dr Mark Schiebler, Deputy Editor for Thoracic Imaging on our editorial board. Together, our expert reviewers and editorial board members have reviewed imaging research involving several thousand patients with COVID-19. The result is a series of high-quality research publications (2-9) with downloads that are 6 to 30 times greater than the average article published in Radiology. Several of our COVID-19 publications have been in the top two or three trending articles on all PubMed.We want to conclude by thanking our review panel members for their generous time commitment to improving imaging research in this rapidly changing field. We anticipate convening future Scientific Expert Panels to help distill additional contemporary topics in Radiology.References1. Kanne J, et al. Essentials for radiologists on COVID-19: an update—Radiology Scientific Expert Panel. Radiology 2020;296:. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200527. Published online February 27, 2020. Link, Google Scholar2. Bernheim A, Mei X, Huang M, et al. Chest CT Findings in Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19): Relationship to Duration of Infection. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200463. Published online February 20, 2020. Link, Google Scholar3. Chung M, Bernheim A, Mei X, et al. CT Imaging Features of 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV). Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200230. Published online February 4, 2020. Link, Google Scholar4. Fang Y, Zhang H, Xie J, et al. Sensitivity of Chest CT for COVID-19: Comparison to RT-PCR. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200432. Published online February 19, 2020. Link, Google Scholar5. Fang Y, Zhang H, Xu Y, Xie J, Pang P, Ji W. CT Manifestations of Two Cases of 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) Pneumonia. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200280. Published online February 7, 2020. Link, Google Scholar6. Pan F, Ye T, Sun P, et al. Time Course of Lung Changes On Chest CT During Recovery From 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pneumonia. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200370. Published online February 13, 2020. Link, Google Scholar7. Ai T, Yang Z, Hou H, et al. Correlation of Chest CT and RT-PCR Testing in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China: A Report of 1014 Cases. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200642. Published online February 26, 2020. Link, Google Scholar8. Song F, Shi N, Shan F, et al. Emerging Coronavirus 2019-nCoV Pneumonia. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200274. Published online February 6, 2020. Link, Google Scholar9. Xie X, Zhong Z, Zhao W, Zheng C, Wang F, Liu J. Chest CT for Typical 2019-nCoV Pneumonia: Relationship to Negative RT-PCR Testing. Radiology 2020. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020200343. Published online February 12, 2020. Link, Google ScholarArticle HistoryPublished online: Feb 27 2020Published in print: Aug 2020 FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited ByWhat's New in the Korean Journal of Radiology in 2021Seong HoPark2021 | Korean Journal of Radiology, Vol. 22, No. 1Imaging in the COVID-19 era: Lessons learned during a pandemicGeorgios AntoniosSideris, MelinaNikolakea, Aikaterini-EleftheriaKaranikola, SofiaKonstantinopoulou, DimitriosGiannis, LucyModahl2021 | World Journal of Radiology, Vol. 13, No. 6Imaging in the COVID-19 era: Lessons learned during a pandemicGeorgios AntoniosSideris, MelinaNikolakea, Aikaterini-EleftheriaKaranikola, SofiaKonstantinopoulou, DimitriosGiannis, LucyModahl2021 | World Journal of Radiology, Vol. 13, No. 6Assessing the Value of Diagnostic Tests in the Coronavirus Disease 2019 PandemicFrancesco Sardanelli, Giovanni Di Leo, 14 May 2020 | Radiology, Vol. 296, No. 3A Structured Approach for Safely Reintroducing Bariatric Surgery in a COVID-19 EnvironmentChristopher RDaigle, TomsAugustin, RickeshaWilson, KarenSchulz, AlisanFathalizadeh, AmyLaktash, MaritaBauman, Kalman PBencsath, WalterCha, JohnRodriguez, AliAminian2020 | Obesity Surgery, Vol. 30, No. 10En tiempos del COVID-19: pandemia e infodemiaAlberto A.Marangoni2020 | Revista Argentina de Radiología / Argentinian Journal of Radiology, Vol. 84, No. 04Chest Computed Tomography for Detection of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): Don't Rush the ScienceMichael D.Hope, Constantine A.Raptis, Travis S.Henry2020 | Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol. 173, No. 2Importancia de la radiografía de tórax en la infección por SARS-CoV-2Gerardo MartínPerdigón Castañeda, Juan JoséMazón Ramírez, BelénDe Anda Díaz, Daniel EduardoGarcía Cedillo2020 | Atención Familiar, Vol. 27Recommended Articles The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Radiology Research Enterprise: Radiology Scientific Expert PanelRadiology2020Volume: 296Issue: 3pp. E134-E140Radiology Department Preparedness for COVID-19: Radiology Scientific Expert Review PanelRadiology2020Volume: 296Issue: 2pp. E106-E112Focus on Readers’ Needs in 2017 and Expanded Journal Features for 2018: Editor’s PageRadioGraphics2018Volume: 38Issue: 1pp. 1-5The Role of Chest Imaging in Patient Management during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multinational Consensus Statement from the Fleischner SocietyRadiology2020Volume: 296Issue: 1pp. 172-180Editor’s Note: 2020—A Year Like No Other for RadiologyRadiology2020Volume: 298Issue: 2pp. 243-244See More RSNA Education Exhibits Pandemic Preparedness: Streamlining the Breast Imaging Patient Care and Teaching Experience During COVID-19Digital Posters2020How to Read an Abdominal CT: Guidance for Radiology Residents from the Visual and Cognitive SciencesDigital Posters2020The On-Call Radiology Residents Guide to Managing the Reading Room: Distractions, Downtimes, and DiscussionsDigital Posters2019 RSNA Case Collection Chronic silicosisRSNA Case Collection2020Extensive Subcutaneous EmphysemaRSNA Case Collection2021COVID-19 PneumoniaRSNA Case Collection2020 Vol. 296, No. 2 Metrics Altmetric Score PDF download

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