Department of Emergency Medicine, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ. 2010 Oct 5;182(14):1527-32. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.091974. Epub 2010 Aug 23.
The Canadian CT Head Rule was developed to allow physicians to be more selective when ordering computed tomography (CT) imaging for patients with minor head injury. We sought to evaluate the effectiveness of implementing this validated decision rule at multiple emergency departments.
We conducted a matched-pair cluster-randomized trial that compared the outcomes of 4531 patients with minor head injury during two 12-month periods (before and after) at hospital emergency departments in Canada, six of which were randomly allocated as intervention sites and six as control sites. At the intervention sites, active strategies, including education, changes to policy and real-time reminders on radiologic requisitions were used to implement the Canadian CT Head Rule. The main outcome measure was referral for CT scan of the head.
Baseline characteristics of patients were similar when comparing control to intervention sites. At the intervention sites, the proportion of patients referred for CT imaging increased from the "before" period (62.8%) to the "after" period (76.2%) (difference +13.3%, 95% CI 9.7%-17.0%). At the control sites, the proportion of CT imaging usage also increased, from 67.5% to 74.1% (difference +6.7%, 95% CI 2.6%-10.8%). The change in mean imaging rates from the "before" period to the "after" period for intervention versus control hospitals was not significant (p = 0.16). There were no missed brain injuries or adverse outcomes.
Our knowledge-translation-based trial of the Canadian CT Head Rule did not reduce rates of CT imaging in Canadian emergency departments. Future studies should identify strategies to deal with barriers to implementation of this decision rule and explore more effective approaches to knowledge translation. (ClinicalTrials.gov trial register no. NCT00993252).
加拿大 CT 头部规则的制定是为了让医生在为轻微头部受伤的患者进行计算机断层扫描(CT)成像时更具选择性。我们旨在评估在多个急诊部门实施这一经过验证的决策规则的有效性。
我们进行了一项匹配的对子群随机临床试验,比较了加拿大六家医院急诊科在两个 12 个月期间(前后)的 4531 名轻微头部受伤患者的结果,其中 6 家被随机分配为干预地点,6 家为对照地点。在干预地点,使用了包括教育、政策改变和实时放射学申请提醒在内的主动策略来实施加拿大 CT 头部规则。主要结局指标是头部 CT 扫描的转诊。
在比较对照组和干预组时,患者的基线特征相似。在干预地点,接受 CT 成像检查的患者比例从“前”期(62.8%)增加到“后”期(76.2%)(差异为+13.3%,95%CI 9.7%-17.0%)。在对照组,CT 成像使用率也从 67.5%增加到 74.1%(差异为+6.7%,95%CI 2.6%-10.8%)。从“前”期到“后”期,干预与对照组医院的平均成像率变化不显著(p=0.16)。没有遗漏的脑损伤或不良结果。
我们基于知识转化的加拿大 CT 头部规则试验并没有降低加拿大急诊部门的 CT 成像率。未来的研究应该确定处理实施这一决策规则障碍的策略,并探索更有效的知识转化方法。(临床试验注册编号:NCT00993252)。