PACS Roundtable, Part 2: The Ideal PACS-EMR Relationship

For many years, PACS lived in its own world, built to facilitate the transition from analog to digital imaging and developed for maximum radiology department productivity and workflow. The technology succeeded brilliantly, solving many workflow problems for users and supporting tremendous increases in radiologist productivity.

Now that electronic medical records (EMRs) are near ubiquitous in hospitals and physician office settings, integration between PACS and the EMR is imperative.  In the second part of a two-part roundtable discussion, we asked a panel of imaging IT experts to address what the ideal PACS–EMR relationship looks like and its role in an enterprise imaging strategy.

Roundtable Participants:

 

  • Louis Lannum, Director of Enterprise Imaging, Cleveland Clinic
  • Kevin McEnery, MD, Director of Innovation and Imaging Informatics and Professor of Radiology, University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center
  • Rasu Shrestha, MD, Chief Innovation Officer of University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), Executive Vice President of UPMC Enterprises
  • Chris C. Tomlinson, MBA, CRA, FAHRA, Senior Director of Radiology, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and Executive Director of Radiology Associates of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

What is the optimal relationship between the EMR and PACS, and how does it differ from what you currently have and what would it cost in dollars and resource to achieve, and are there any other data sources that would help radiology improve its service?

Tomlinson: The relationship shouldn’t be as it is today, just bringing up an image, but more as others talked about: How can we really mine that data? How can we have information that’s searchable and comparable? Not just “Hey, I’m seeing this patient in the clinic, I am in the EMR, and I click the link and it launches the PACS or enterprise viewer.” I think it needs to get a little bit more integrated than that.

Lou talked about bringing up multimedia, video images, light imaging. I think the enterprise viewers have to get a little better than they currently are. CHOP has invested in enterprise viewers since the beginning, and a lot of clinicians struggle a bit with them because an enterprise viewer and a PACS viewer are two different things.

A lot of people are used to a PACS viewer. A lot of people fight to keep the PACS viewer, because they want to see the radiology images, but we have to convince them that it’s not just radiology we’re serving anymore.

As a radiology director, I partner with my IT friends, telling clinicians, “I know you like that radiology viewer, but look at all the other stuff you can see in this enterprise viewer.” When you think about the journey, the enterprise viewers continue to get better. A lot of people think, “Oh, enterprise viewer equals radiology viewer dummied down.”

It’s not about how we put 10 million 3D reconstructions onto the enterprise viewer. It’s how we can bring up images in the context of that physician’s workflow. If that doctor’s up in the SICU and wants to see all the patients on his service and use the enterprise viewer for rounding. He doesn’t want to have to go back and forth between the EMR and the enterprise viewer. They want to see the patients in their bed order, so when they’re rounding, they can see the images very quickly and not have to do a search per patient.

Enterprise viewers still have a way to go in reflecting the enterprise workflow versus a radiologist workflow. I know we’re investing heavily into that with some of the newer players that are on the market. Again, a lot of the backend of this is how do the other data sources help improve radiology service?

What do you perceive as the optimal relationship between radiology and the EMR?

McEnery: I’ll try to make my answer brief, but I could speak for a long time on this. I am going to respond in terms of the radiologist, because I don’t think the EMR redefines PACS necessarily, but I do think it redefines the radiologist and the expectation for information they have available to them.

We had a self-developed EMR for 15 years that radiologists worked inside of at MD Anderson. We’ve now switched to another vendor, and we’re about six weeks into that transition.

The principles learned over the past 15 years continue to apply today. The radiologists want clinical information from the EMR. As for clinicians, some are content to allow the radiologist’s report to determine whether image review is needed, while others review on PACS every study ordered.

As an example, I sat down to lunch today with a colleague, and he mentioned that he’s now created a template that can instantly bring my impression into his report. He doesn’t have to look at the images anymore, unless there is a need based upon the findings noted in the radiologist report or the report differs from the clinical presentation of the patient.

I think there’s going to be pressure on radiologists to create information, and not necessarily only images. There will be pressure to make access to images more efficient, to provide the clinical context, so the radiologist can decompress the clinicians and allow them to provide better patient care.

However, the radiologist—as a quid pro quo—has to understand the patient’s clinical presentation. The EMR provides radiologists—as well as the referring clinican—with access to pertinent clinical information. It would be really great, too, if I could read the clinican’s note while they’re producing it, so that I could see what they were thinking and my report actually could be sympatico with the clinical presentation of the patient. Having radiologists and clinicians collaborating in the same EMR platform should provide all with better integration of all pertinent clinical information resulting in imaging reports that are informed by the entire clinical presentation and not simply by a single, provided clinical indication.  

My colleague agreed to do that. I think the relationship between EMR and PACS reflects how the relationship between radiologists and clinicians change, because they’re both working in the same environment.

Shrestha: Let’s piggyback off of what Kevin just mentioned. The way that I see it, we’re data rich and information poor. We’ve got lots and lots of data, but we’re really information poor. We radiologists, we’re fairly simple people:  We’re happy when we have access to relevant priors. Maybe we have some data from our 3D imaging system, maybe some data from the lung nodule tracking module. But there’s so much more data yet that exists in the EMR, and beyond.

The reality is that some of it may be relevant, and a lot of it actually may not be relevant in terms of what we’re doing specifically in radiology. The question really is how do we get at that data, but what’s even more interesting is how do we contextually represent that data, because context is king.

At Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), we found when you’re looking across the value chain—it is critical to get at the data that might be relevant from the EMR that might help in ordering the study or acquiring the images (as we’re looking at protocols) or reading the case (and looking for specific nuggets of information that might be correlated with findings that we see in the imaging studies themselves)—if the context is king, how do we decipher the signal from the noise? Data itself is good, but what we seek is context so that we can get at the relevant insights that are, in turn, actionable.

The reality also is that not all of the data is in the EMR. To go back to the end of your question, are there other data sources? Not all of the data is in the EMR. As we’re looking at value-based imaging, we’re focusing on things like outcomes. If it’s outcomes that we’re after, how do we efficiently measure them? Some of it is in the EMR, and maybe we can correlate certain things.

We’re also looking at things like efficiency, and how we measure that. Also, we’re looking at lowering costs. There are other nuggets of data that the EMR might have bread crumbs and clues into, so we can really get at things like care coordination, referring physician and patient satisfaction and utilization management. It really is about connecting the dots across all of these different components of data that don’t necessarily exist in one silo. That really is the challenge—and the opportunity—with value-based imaging.

What are the benefits of building an effective integration between enterprise data and PACS? 

Lannum: At Cleveland Clinic, we found integration is about providing access to data—integrating all of these silos, either independently or bringing the silos into a central repository and making the data available to the physician, radiologists, referring physicians, orthopedic surgeons. It’s providing access to the data that they need, when they’re in the encounter with the patient, whether it’s a surgical encounter, or it’s an office visit.

For every imaging producer—whether they’re an orthopedic physician who’s taking an ultrasound or a gastroenterologist is doing a GI—there are 10 other physicians who want access to that data. Integrating that data into the EMR at the point of service is an essential part of our strategy.

McEnery: I think the point here is that the enterprise data can make PACS more effective, make radiology more effective. I’ll give you two use cases. One is in our switch to a new EMR, we’ve actually increased the fidelity of our orderables that the clinician can order. For example, instead of just ordering an MR of pelvis, we ask the clinician, what is the clinical question that’s being asked? Is it an MR of pelvis because the patient has ovarian cancer, or an MR of pelvis because the person has potential metastasis to the bone? The imaging protocols for these examinations are different, so it’s essential to have the study optimized for the patient’s clinical presentation.

Instead of just an MR pelvis, the indication’s pain, we’re asking the clinician to define for radiology and the radiologist what more specifically do they want out of the imaging that radiology’s going to perform? That’s one example. We’re using that information to make our protocols and our imaging more effective.

The imaging protocol also then informs the radiologist of what information they need to provide back to the clinician on their reports, again increasing the information back to the clinician.

Finally, in our worklist, one of the key fields is, “When is the patient’s next clinical interaction going to occur?” At MD Anderson, there is such a high percentage of patients getting imaged within 36 hours of their appointment—or even less—that we actually prioritize the worklist based upon the patient’s next appointment (not when the imaging was done), pulling the information from the hospital’s scheduling system. Again, we’re using information from the enterprise to improve the value, the data and the information that’s being provided from radiology back to the clinician.

Shrestha: Yes, I think we need to evolve the traditional view of what the VNA is to more of an enterprise content management system. Move , I think, a single-bucket strategy focused just in radiology to more of a capture-once, store-once and-use-multiple-times-via-the-right-means-across-the-enterprise approach.

A recent survey of academic chairs found that just 47% had a PACS that was integrated with the EHR. Is radiology partially to blame for this number?

McEnery: As I said before, for 15 years, we’ve had integration of an EMR with PACS, and we still have that in our transition to a commercial-based system. That was one of our requirements and we’ve accomplished that.

I think the radiologists could not imagine not working in an environment where they had access to the entirety of the patient’s clinical information, where there would be laboratory reports, pathology reports, clinical documentation. I think the integration to the current EMR actually gives us more opportunities to fine tune the information flow between clinicians and radiologists and backwards, and completing that circle.

There are tremendous opportunities once you integrate. The issue I think people have is they don’t know what they don’t have. Once you experience the ability to work inside an EMR, to have the context continuously, I think that that number should dramatically increase.

What is being done to enhance the relationship between radiology and IT?

Shrestha: I’ll talk to the relationship between IT and radiology. There’s some pushback to this in IT when you look at hospital IT broadly. In radiology, we are special. We’ve been saying this for a while, but it truly is real, because with specific needs that are very radiology-centric, there are specific things that need to be done in terms of support around our complex workflows, whether it’s with workflows upstream or at the modality site or during the reads and farther downstream on the archive and workflow management side.

Like politics—they say all politics is local—in imaging, perhaps the term is “glocal.” It’s global context with local and specific needs that are real in the workflows that are inherent to radiology. That’s what we’ve managed to do at UPMC with this specialized support that’s dedicated to radiology, with extended, broader IT support that takes all of the goodness of efficiency, scale and management of content, workflows and security at the broader enterprise level.

It’s a fine balance between the two, but it’s one that I think we need to think through quite logically and manage. In the context of all of that comes this notion of innovation. How do you continue to innovate and think outside the box and create the right solutions that we need in that everyone’s fair game to that. Radiologists, or clinical colleagues and IT folks—we all participate in the process of innovation. It’s almost three talent pools working towards common goals.

The relationship between radiology and IT at CHOP

Tomlinson: I think we’re very similar, in that [we have shared IT responsibilities]. When you  go through the roles of IT versus radiology, and you start to detail the roles out in terms of support models, you see that there’s room for both, and they’re not necessarily duplicative. I think this is a big mistake a lot of places make as they assume it’s either all local or all centralized IT.

In working with your friends in IT, you have to understand that there are differences in each group and what they’re bringing to the table. I think there’s value in both. Having that enterprise imaging strategy blessed and brought to you by both IT and radiology is very powerful, particularly in that value-based world.

Again, it’s not about control, it’s about how do we get a longitudinal view of the data? How do we get the data to the clinicians, as other folks on this call have said, in a way that’s meaningful to them, that’s not just burying them with data, but clean and correct data?

The power that is in the partnership between IT and radiology or radiology/cardiology and other imaging modalities is that each brings a different thing to the table. Once you dig into that, both parties realize that both constituents are needed and have very different backgrounds in what they bring to the table.

The key is understanding the differences and what each constituency brings to the table, and how you leverage that out to the institution. Again, we’ve had a lot of success doing that, but also a lot of learnings from each of those constituencies’ perspective—the world looks a lot different today.

Mr. Lannum, as an enterprise IT team member originating in radiology, how has that impacted the relationship between radiology and IT?

Lannum: I’m sort of the prodigal son. I get, “Why did you leave us?” I think it’s helped that relationship, because I do have an imaging background.

I’m going to pick up a little bit from Chris. The relationship between radiology and IT is a delicate one, and I get that. I also understand that radiology has some clinical workflows that are very, very important, as is workstation management. They need their own IT support.

At Cleveland Clinic, our radiology informatics colleagues support the radiology PACS across the entire enterprise. The [enterprise imaging] IT group is responsible for support of the VNA, image distribution and the acquisition of images from the other departments. We don’t get into radiology’s IT business. We get their images into the core and help them distribute them to the rest of our clinicians.

Between radiology informatics and the IT group, we have an enterprise-wide change control meeting every week, and changes going on in radiology and in the IT space are shared, so there are no surprises. When there is an issue, we plug into their help desk. They also plug into ours.

Radiology is the largest contributor to the enterprise archive today, and as such, it needs to be involved in all of those decision-making pieces. As you go outside into other departments across the enterprise, IT has a larger structure that can help the enterprise and other imaging service lines understand imaging and deliver those images across a broader audience.

Read the first part of this roundtable discussion in the article Enterprise Imaging Roundtable: Goals and Strategy. 

Cheryl Proval,

Vice President, Executive Editor, Radiology Business

Cheryl began her career in journalism when Wite-Out was a relatively new technology. During the past 16 years, she has covered radiology and followed developments in healthcare policy. She holds a BA in History from the University of Delaware and likes nothing better than a good story, well told.

Around the web

The nuclear imaging isotope shortage of molybdenum-99 may be over now that the sidelined reactor is restarting. ASNC's president says PET and new SPECT technologies helped cardiac imaging labs better weather the storm.

CMS has more than doubled the CCTA payment rate from $175 to $357.13. The move, expected to have a significant impact on the utilization of cardiac CT, received immediate praise from imaging specialists.

The all-in-one Omni Legend PET/CT scanner is now being manufactured in a new production facility in Waukesha, Wisconsin.

Trimed Popup
Trimed Popup