IHERO UseCase Anonymization

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1. Proposed Workitem: Radiotherapy Patient Anonymization

  • Proposal Editor: C.Field
  • Editor: C.Field
  • Date: N/A (Wiki keeps history)
  • Version: N/A (Wiki keeps history)
  • Domain: Radiation Oncology

2. The Problem

The anonymization and electronic submission of radiotherapy data for clinical trials quality assurance (QA) and storage in a central RT data repository requires some development and standardization. The current process does not support

  • the specification of which DICOM tags to anonymize (a configuration file which specifies which tags would be really nice)
  • a standard technique for performing the electronic transfer in a secure encrypted environment compliant with HIPPA in USA, FOIP and Health Information Act in Alberta, and regulations from other countries

3. Key Use Case

How it currently works
For clinical trial submission on a treatment planning system, a user selects the patient to export. The data is exported to a local file system. Somehow the user is required to anonymize the data (the ITC_DICOMpiler provides this tool, but it misses some tags). The data is then SFTP’d (or couriered on a CD, or mailed) to the ITC centre in St.Louis, QARC, or elsewhere. Treatment record information is generally not sent in a DICOM-RT format, but as screen captures or printed copies.

How it should work
From a treatment planning system, virtual simulator, or record and verify system the user selects a patient, the type of data required for export (e.g. CT, MR, structures, plans, doses, DVH, DRRs, treatment records), specific subsets of data (e.g. which structures to export and which DVHs to export), select tags to anonymize, select the data repository to receive the data. The data would then be anonymized, encrypted, and transmitted to the selected data repository.

4. Standards & Systems

Treatment planning systems, virtual simulation system, record & verify systems, CT scanners, MR scanner, PET and other scanners, Picture Archive and Communication Systems (PACS).
DICOM-RT, caBIG

5. Discussion

This may not be an ideal inter-operability issue but represents a broad interpretation of inter-operability since it will allow thousands of RT facilities to pool data originated by various vendors into a database that can advance the entire discipline of radiation oncology. This is a big idea that needs the support of a multi-vendor effort that is the essence of IHE-RO.