High-throughput digitization of analog human echocardiography data

Echocardiographic imaging has been acquired in historical longitudinal cohorts of cardiovascular disease. Many cohorts were established prior to digital recording of echocardiography, and thus have preserved their archival imaging on Video Home System (VHS) tapes. These tapes require large physical...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:MethodsX Vol. 7; p. 101159
Main Authors: Kwan, Alan C., Salto, Gerran, Demosthenes, Emmanuella, Lehman, Birgitta T., Osypiuk, Ewa, Stantchev, Plamen, Vasan, Ramachandran S., Cheng, Susan
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01-01-2020
Elsevier
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Summary:Echocardiographic imaging has been acquired in historical longitudinal cohorts of cardiovascular disease. Many cohorts were established prior to digital recording of echocardiography, and thus have preserved their archival imaging on Video Home System (VHS) tapes. These tapes require large physical storage space, are affected by physical degradation, and cannot be analyzed using modern digital techniques. We have designed and implemented a standardized methodology for digitizing analog data in historical longitudinal cohorts. The methodology creates a pipeline through critical steps of initial review, digitization, anonymization, quality control, and storage. The methodology has been implemented in the Framingham Offspring Study, a community-based epidemiological cohort study with echocardiography performed during serial examinations between 1987 and 1998. We present this method as an accessible pipeline for preserving and repurposing historical imaging data acquired from large cohort studies. The described technique:•Outlines a generalizable pipeline for digitization of analog recordings of echocardiography stored on VHS tapes•Addresses research concerns including quality control, anonymization, and storage•Expresses the authors’ individual experience regarding observed image quality, training needs, and potential limitations to help readers understand the costs and benefits of this method Graphical abstract summary diagram. Includes original acquisition and storage of image, digitization, anonymization, and research pipeline. VHS: Video Home System, DICOM: Digital Imaging and Communications format in Medicine, PACS: Picture Archiving and Communications System. Clipart source: Microsoft PowerPoint 2019. [Display omitted]
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2215-0161
2215-0161
DOI:10.1016/j.mex.2020.101159