Messersmith W A, Brown D F, Barry M J
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Am J Emerg Med. 2001 Oct;19(6):479-81. doi: 10.1053/ajem.2001.27137.
We reviewed reports from 321 consecutive emergency department (ED) noncontrast, helical "renal stone" abdominal CT scans obtained at a single medical center between April 1996 to June 1997 for incidental findings. Incidental findings were common (45% of scans), and approximately half were rated of "moderate" or "serious" concern by 2 independent reviewers (kappa = 0.72). ED records indicated that only 21% of incidental findings were documented, and only 11 (18%) of cases with findings of "moderate/severe" concern had evidence of follow-up on hospital chart review. Although work-up of these 11 cases did not yield any serious diagnoses, many potentially serious incidental findings without follow-up remain worrisome.
我们回顾了1996年4月至1997年6月间在某单一医疗中心连续进行的321例急诊科非增强螺旋“肾结石”腹部CT扫描报告,以查找偶然发现。偶然发现很常见(占扫描病例的45%),约一半的发现被两名独立审阅者评为“中度”或“严重”关注(卡帕值=0.72)。急诊科记录显示,只有21%的偶然发现被记录,在医院病历复查中,只有11例(18%)有“中度/重度”关注发现的病例有后续跟进的证据。尽管对这11例病例的检查未得出任何严重诊断,但许多未进行后续跟进的潜在严重偶然发现仍令人担忧。