McCreadie G, Oliver T B
Department of Clinical Radiology, Ninewells Hospital & Medical School, Dundee, Tayside, Scotland, UK.
Clin Radiol. 2009 May;64(5):491-9; discussion 500-1. doi: 10.1016/j.crad.2008.12.010. Epub 2009 Mar 3.
To review cases discussed at a radiology departmental errors and discrepancies meeting, classify these to determine common patterns of error, and, focussing on CT, present a small number of specific errors that occur commonly.
All cases discussed at our departmental discrepancies and complications meeting over a 30 month period were reviewed. Those where a genuine error was agreed to have arisen were classified by error type: poor image interpretation (false positive, false negative, misclassification); technical error (poor technique or procedural complication); and communications error. The imaging method from which the error arose was also recorded. Specific recurring errors were identified and collated.
Two hundred and fifty-six errors were identified in 222 patients. Two hundred and twenty-five errors (88%) were due to poor image interpretation (14 false positive, 155 false negative, 56 misclassification). Seven errors (3%) were technical and 24 errors (9%) were due to poor communication. One hundred and fifty-nine (62%) of the 256 errors arose in relation to CT, 31 (12%) to ultrasound, 29 (11%) to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), 24 (9%) to radiography, and 13 (5%) to fluoroscopy examinations, three (1.2%) of which involved vascular intervention. Several repeating errors arising during CT reporting were identified.
Error is commonly identified in relation to radiological examinations. Most errors involve image interpretation, but a significant proportion result from departmental miscommunication. The majority of errors are false-negative interpretations and occur during interpretation of CT examinations. Recurring false-negative CT errors include failure to appreciate unexpected bowel or pancreatic malignancy, incidental pulmonary emboli, abnormality of vascular structures, bone lesions, omental disease, incidental abnormality present on targeted examinations or lesions on the periphery of the field of view.
回顾在放射科错误与差异会议上讨论的病例,对其进行分类以确定常见的错误模式,并聚焦于CT,呈现一些常见的特定错误。
回顾了在30个月期间我们科室差异与并发症会议上讨论的所有病例。那些被认定确实出现错误的病例按错误类型分类:图像解读不佳(假阳性、假阴性、错误分类);技术错误(技术不佳或操作并发症);以及沟通错误。还记录了出现错误的成像方法。识别并整理了特定的反复出现的错误。
在222名患者中识别出256个错误。225个错误(88%)归因于图像解读不佳(14例假阳性、155例假阴性、56例错误分类)。7个错误(3%)是技术方面的,24个错误(9%)是由于沟通不畅。256个错误中有159个(62%)与CT相关,31个(12%)与超声相关,29个(11%)与磁共振成像(MRI)相关,24个(9%)与X线摄影相关,13个(5%)与透视检查相关,其中3个(1.2%)涉及血管介入。识别出了CT报告过程中出现的一些反复出现的错误。
在放射学检查中常见错误。大多数错误涉及图像解读,但很大一部分是由于科室沟通不畅导致的。大多数错误是假阴性解读,且发生在CT检查的解读过程中。CT反复出现的假阴性错误包括未识别出意外的肠道或胰腺恶性肿瘤、偶然发现的肺栓塞、血管结构异常、骨病变、网膜疾病、靶向检查中出现的偶然异常或视野边缘的病变。