Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 55 Fruit St, White 270, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Radiology. 2012 Feb;262(2):544-9. doi: 10.1148/radiol.11111091. Epub 2011 Nov 14.
To measure the proportion of high-cost imaging generated by a radiologist's recommendation and to identify the imaging findings resulting in follow-up.
This retrospective HIPAA-compliant study had institutional review board approval, with waiver of informed consent. A recommended examination was defined as one performed within a single episode of care (defined as fewer than 60 days after the initial imaging) following a radiologist's recommendation in a prior examination report. Chest and abdominal computed tomography (CT), brain and lumbar spine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, and body positron emission tomography were included for analysis. From a database of all radiology examinations (approximately 200,000) at one institution over a 6-month period, a computerized search identified all high-cost examinations that were preceded by an examination containing a radiologist recommendation. Medical records were reviewed to verify accuracy of the recommending-recommended examination pairs and to determine the reason for the radiologist's recommendation. For proportions, 95% confidence intervals were calculated.
Overall, 1558 of 29,232 (5.3%) high-cost examinations followed a radiologist's recommendation. Chest CT was the high-cost examination most often resulting from a radiologist's recommendation (878 of 9331, 9.4%), followed by abdominal CT (390 of 10,258, 3.8%) and brain MR imaging (222 of 6436, 3.4%). The examination types with the highest numbers of follow-up examinations were chest radiography (n=431), chest CT (n=410), abdominal CT (n=214), and abdominal ultrasonography (n=120). The most common findings resulting in follow-up were pulmonary nodules or masses (559 of 1558, 35.9%), other pulmonary abnormalities (150 of 1558, 9.6%), adenopathy (103 of 1558, 6.6%), renal lesions (101 of 1558, 6.5%), and negative examination findings (101 of 1558, 6.5%).
Radiologists' recommendations account for only a small proportion of outpatient high-cost imaging examinations. Pulmonary nodule follow-up is the most common cause for radiologist-generated examinations.
测量放射科医生推荐产生的高成本影像的比例,并确定导致随访的影像学发现。
这项回顾性符合 HIPAA 标准的研究得到了机构审查委员会的批准,并豁免了知情同意。推荐检查被定义为在放射科医生在前一份检查报告中的推荐后,在单次护理期间(定义为初始影像后 60 天内)进行的检查。胸部和腹部计算机断层扫描(CT)、脑和腰椎磁共振成像(MR)以及体正电子发射断层扫描被纳入分析。在一家机构的数据库中,对 6 个月内的所有放射学检查(约 200,000 次)进行了计算机搜索,以识别所有在包含放射科医生推荐的检查之前进行的高成本检查。审查病历以验证推荐-推荐检查对的准确性,并确定放射科医生推荐的原因。对于比例,计算了 95%置信区间。
总体而言,在 29232 次高成本检查中,有 1558 次(5.3%)是在放射科医生的建议下进行的。胸部 CT 是最常因放射科医生的建议而进行的高成本检查(9331 次中的 878 次,9.4%),其次是腹部 CT(10258 次中的 390 次,3.8%)和脑 MR 成像(6436 次中的 222 次,3.4%)。随访检查数量最多的检查类型是胸部 X 线摄影(n=431)、胸部 CT(n=410)、腹部 CT(n=214)和腹部超声检查(n=120)。导致随访的最常见影像学发现是肺结节或肿块(1558 次中的 559 次,35.9%)、其他肺部异常(1558 次中的 150 次,9.6%)、淋巴结肿大(1558 次中的 103 次,6.6%)、肾脏病变(1558 次中的 101 次,6.5%)和阴性检查结果(1558 次中的 101 次,6.5%)。
放射科医生的建议仅占门诊高成本影像检查的一小部分。肺结节随访是放射科医生产生的检查最常见的原因。