Baldwin D R, Eaton T, Kolbe J, Christmas T, Milne D, Mercer J, Steele E, Garrett J, Wilsher M L, Wells A U
Department of Respiratory Medicine, City Hospital, Nottingham NG5 1PB, UK.
Thorax. 2002 Sep;57(9):817-22. doi: 10.1136/thorax.57.9.817.
Computed tomography (CT) and fine needle guided biopsy (FNB) are often used in the assessment of patients with lung nodules. The influence of these techniques on clinical decision making has not been quantified, especially for small solitary pulmonary nodules (SPN) where the probability of malignancy is lower. A study was undertaken to determine the effect of CT and FNB derived information on clinical decision making in patients with a solitary pulmonary nodule < or = 3 cm in diameter on initial chest radiography.
Clinical, physiological, and outcome data on 114 patients with an SPN < or = 3 cm who had subsequent thoracic CT and FNB were extracted from the records of a specialist cardiorespiratory hospital in Auckland, New Zealand. Chest radiographs and CT scans were reported according to specified criteria by a thoracic radiologist. Computer generated summary sheets were used to present cases to each of six clinicians. Each case was presented three times: (1) with clinical data and chest radiograph only; (2) with the addition of the CT report; and (3) with all data including the result of the FNB. Clinicians were asked to specify their management on each occasion and to estimate the probability of the lesion being malignant. Reproducibility was assessed by re-evaluating 24 cases 1 month later.
33 (29%) nodules were benign, 35 (31%) nodules (malignant) were resected with negative node sampling, and 46 (40%) had a non-curative outcome (radiotherapy, incomplete resection, refused therapy). Intra-clinician decision making was consistent for all three levels of clinical data (median kappa values 0.79-0.89). Agreement between clinicians on the need for surgery was lowest with chest radiography alone (kappa=0.33), rose with CT information (kappa=0.44), and increased further with the addition of the FNB data (kappa=0.57). The proportion of successful decisions on surgical intervention (against the known outcome) increased with the addition of CT reports and further with FNB reports (p=0.006, Friedman's test). The major benefit of the information added by CT and FNB reports was a reduction in unnecessary surgery, especially when the clinical perception of pre-test probability of malignancy was intermediate (31-70%). FNB data contributed most to the benefit (p<0.001). The addition of CT and FNB was cost efficient and can be applied specifically to patients with a low or intermediate probability of malignancy.
Both CT and FNB make cost effective contributions to the clinical management of SPN < or = 3 cm in diameter by reducing unnecessary operations and increasing agreement between physicians on the need for surgery.
计算机断层扫描(CT)和细针引导活检(FNB)常用于肺结节患者的评估。这些技术对临床决策的影响尚未量化,特别是对于恶性概率较低的小的孤立性肺结节(SPN)。本研究旨在确定CT和FNB所获信息对初始胸部X线检查时直径≤3 cm的孤立性肺结节患者临床决策的影响。
从新西兰奥克兰一家专业心肺医院的记录中提取了114例直径≤3 cm的SPN患者的临床、生理和预后数据,这些患者随后接受了胸部CT和FNB检查。胸部X线片和CT扫描由一位胸部放射科医生根据特定标准进行报告。使用计算机生成的总结表向六位临床医生分别展示病例。每个病例展示三次:(1)仅提供临床数据和胸部X线片;(2)增加CT报告;(3)提供所有数据,包括FNB结果。要求临床医生在每种情况下指定其管理方案,并估计病变为恶性的概率。1个月后重新评估24例病例以评估可重复性。
33个(29%)结节为良性,35个(31%)结节(恶性)经手术切除且淋巴结取样阴性,46个(40%)患者预后不佳(放疗、不完全切除、拒绝治疗)。临床医生在所有三个临床数据水平上的决策是一致的(中位数kappa值为0.79 - 0.89)。临床医生之间关于手术必要性的一致性在仅使用胸部X线片时最低(kappa = 0.33),随着CT信息的增加而上升(kappa = 0.44),在增加FNB数据后进一步提高(kappa = 0.57)。手术干预的成功决策比例(与已知结果相比)随着CT报告的增加而增加,随着FNB报告的增加进一步增加(p = 0.006,Friedman检验)。CT和FNB报告所增加信息的主要益处是减少了不必要的手术,特别是当临床对恶性肿瘤术前概率的感知处于中等水平(31% - 70%)时。FNB数据对这一益处贡献最大(p < 0.001)。CT和FNB的应用具有成本效益,可专门应用于恶性概率低或中等的患者。
CT和FNB均通过减少不必要的手术并增加医生之间关于手术必要性的一致性,对直径≤3 cm的SPN的临床管理做出了具有成本效益的贡献。