UCLA Emergency Medicine Center, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2011 Nov;58(5):407-16.e15. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2011.06.003. Epub 2011 Sep 3.
Routine pan-computed tomography (CT, including of the head, neck, chest, abdomen/pelvis) has been advocated for evaluation of patients with blunt trauma based on the belief that early detection of clinically occult injuries will improve outcomes. We sought to determine whether selective imaging could decrease scan use without missing clinically important injuries.
This was a prospective observational study of 701 patients with blunt trauma at an academic trauma center. Before scanning, the most senior emergency physician and trauma surgeon independently indicated which components of pan-CT were necessary. We calculated the proportion of scans deemed unnecessary that: (a) were abnormal and resulted in a pre-defined critical action or (b) were abnormal.
Pan-CT was performed in 600 of the patients; the remaining 101 underwent limited scanning. One or both physicians indicated a willingness to omit 35% of the individual scans. An abnormality was present in 18% of scans, including 22% of desired scans and 10% of undesired scans. Among the 95 patients who had one of the 102 undesired scans with abnormal results, 3 underwent a predefined critical action. There is disagreement among the authors about the clinical significance of the abnormalities found on the 99 undesired scans that did not lead to a critical action.
Selective scanning could reduce the number of scans, missing some injuries but few critical ones. The clinical importance of injuries missed on undesired scans was subject to individual interpretation, which varied substantially among authors. This difference of opinion serves as a microcosm of the larger debate on appropriate use of expensive medical technologies.
基于早期发现隐匿性损伤可改善预后的理念,常规全腹部计算机断层扫描(CT,包括头部、颈部、胸部、腹部/骨盆)已被推荐用于评估钝器伤患者。我们旨在确定选择性成像是否可以在不遗漏重要临床损伤的情况下减少扫描使用。
这是一项在学术创伤中心进行的 701 例钝器伤患者的前瞻性观察性研究。在扫描前,最资深的急诊医生和创伤外科医生独立指出全腹部 CT 中需要哪些部分。我们计算了被认为不必要的扫描比例:(a)异常并导致预定的关键操作,或(b)异常。
600 例患者进行了全腹部 CT 检查;其余 101 例患者进行了有限扫描。一位或两位医生表示愿意放弃 35%的个体扫描。18%的扫描存在异常,包括 22%的期望扫描和 10%的不期望扫描。在 95 例有 102 例不期望扫描异常结果的患者中,有 3 例进行了预定的关键操作。作者对未导致关键操作的 99 例不期望扫描中发现的异常的临床意义存在分歧。
选择性扫描可以减少扫描数量,可能会遗漏一些损伤,但很少是关键的损伤。不期望扫描中遗漏的损伤的临床重要性取决于个体解释,作者之间存在很大差异。这种意见分歧是对昂贵医疗技术的适当使用的更大争议的一个缩影。