Alaia Michael J, Khatib Omar, Shah Mehul, A Bosco Joseph, M Jazrawi Laith, Strauss Eric J
Division of Sports Medicine, NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, 333 East 38th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY, 10016, USA.
Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2015 Aug;23(8):2213-2217. doi: 10.1007/s00167-014-3003-8. Epub 2014 May 16.
To evaluate whether screening radiographs as part of the initial workup of knee pain impacts clinical decision-making in a sports medicine practice.
A questionnaire was completed by the attending orthopaedic surgeon following the initial office visit for 499 consecutive patients presenting to the sports medicine centre with a chief complaint of knee pain. The questionnaire documented patient age, duration of symptoms, location of knee pain, associated mechanical symptoms, history of trauma within the past 2 weeks, positive findings on plain radiographs, whether magnetic resonance imaging was ordered, and whether plain radiographs impacted the management decisions for the patient. Patients were excluded if they had prior X-rays, history of malignancy, ongoing pregnancy, constitutional symptoms as well as those patients with prior knee surgery or intra-articular infections. Statistical analyses were then performed to determine which factors were more likely do correspond with diagnostic radiographs.
Overall, initial screening radiographs did not change management in 72 % of the patients assessed in the office. The mean age of patients in whom radiographs did change management was 57.9 years compared to 37.1 years in those patients where plain radiograph did not change management (p < 0.0001). Plain radiographs had no impact on clinical management in 97.3 % of patients younger than 40. In patients whom radiographs did change management, radiographs were more likely to influence management if patients were over age forty, had pain for over 6 months, had medial or diffuse pain, or had mechanical symptoms. A basic cost analysis revealed that the cost of a clinically useful radiographic series in a patient under 40 years of age was $7,600, in contrast to $413 for a useful series in patients above the age of 40.
Data from the current study support the hypothesis that for the younger patient population, routine radiographic imaging as a screening tool may be of little clinical benefit. Factors supporting obtaining screening radiographs include age greater than 40, knee pain for greater than 6 months, the presence of medial or diffuse knee pain, and the presence of mechanical symptoms.
II.
评估作为膝关节疼痛初始检查一部分的筛查X线片是否会影响运动医学实践中的临床决策。
在运动医学中心,连续499例以膝关节疼痛为主诉前来就诊的患者进行初次门诊后,由主治骨科医生完成一份调查问卷。该问卷记录了患者的年龄、症状持续时间、膝关节疼痛部位、相关机械性症状、过去2周内的外伤史、X线平片的阳性发现、是否进行了磁共振成像检查以及X线平片是否影响了患者的治疗决策。如果患者有既往X线检查史、恶性肿瘤病史、正在妊娠、全身症状以及有既往膝关节手术史或关节内感染史,则将其排除。然后进行统计分析,以确定哪些因素更有可能与诊断性X线片相关。
总体而言,在门诊评估的患者中,72%的患者初始筛查X线片未改变治疗方案。X线片改变治疗方案的患者平均年龄为57.9岁,而X线平片未改变治疗方案的患者平均年龄为37.1岁(p<0.0001)。在97.3%的40岁以下患者中,X线平片对临床治疗无影响。在X线片改变治疗方案的患者中,如果患者年龄超过40岁、疼痛超过6个月、有内侧或弥漫性疼痛或有机械性症状,则X线片更有可能影响治疗。一项基本成本分析显示,40岁以下患者进行一次有临床意义的X线检查系列的成本为7600美元,而40岁以上患者进行一次有意义的检查系列的成本为413美元。
本研究数据支持以下假设:对于年轻患者群体,常规X线成像作为筛查工具可能几乎没有临床益处。支持进行筛查X线片检查的因素包括年龄大于40岁、膝关节疼痛超过6个月、存在内侧或弥漫性膝关节疼痛以及存在机械性症状。
II级。