Godwin Benjamin D, Drake Frederick T, Simianu Vlad V, Shriki Jabi E, Hippe Daniel S, Dighe Manjiri, Bastawrous Sarah, Cuevas Carlos, Flum David, Bhargava Puneet
1 Department of Radiology, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, UW Mailbox 357115, Seattle, WA 98195.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2015 Jun;204(6):1212-9. doi: 10.2214/AJR.14.13512.
The purpose of this study was to ascertain if standardized radiologic reporting for appendicitis imaging increases diagnostic accuracy.
We developed a standardized appendicitis reporting system that includes objective imaging findings common in appendicitis and a certainty score ranging from 1 (definitely not appendicitis) through 5 (definitely appendicitis). Four radiologists retrospectively reviewed the preoperative CT scans of 96 appendectomy patients using our reporting system. The presence of appendicitis-specific imaging findings and certainty scores were compared with final pathology. These comparisons were summarized using odds ratios (ORs) and the AUC.
The appendix was visualized on CT in 89 patients, of whom 71 (80%) had pathologically proven appendicitis. Imaging findings associated with appendicitis included appendiceal diameter (odds ratio [OR] = 14 [> 10 vs < 6 mm]; p = 0.002), periappendiceal fat stranding (OR = 8.9; p < 0.001), and appendiceal mucosal hyperenhancement (OR = 8.7; p < 0.001). Of 35 patients whose initial clinical findings were reported as indeterminate, 28 (80%) had appendicitis. In this initially indeterminate group, using the standardized reporting system, radiologists assigned higher certainty scores (4 or 5) in 21 of the 28 patients with appendicitis (75%) and lower scores (1 or 2) in five of the seven patients without appendicitis (71%) (AUC = 0.90; p = 0.001).
Standardized reporting and grading of objective imaging findings correlated well with postoperative pathology and may decrease the number of CT findings reported as indeterminate for appendicitis. Prospective evaluation of this reporting system on a cohort of patients with clinically suspected appendicitis is currently under way.
本研究旨在确定阑尾炎影像学的标准化报告是否能提高诊断准确性。
我们开发了一种标准化的阑尾炎报告系统,该系统包括阑尾炎常见的客观影像学表现以及从1(肯定不是阑尾炎)到5(肯定是阑尾炎)的确定性评分。四位放射科医生使用我们的报告系统对96例接受阑尾切除术患者的术前CT扫描进行回顾性分析。将阑尾炎特异性影像学表现和确定性评分与最终病理结果进行比较。这些比较采用优势比(OR)和曲线下面积(AUC)进行总结。
89例患者的阑尾在CT上可见,其中71例(80%)经病理证实为阑尾炎。与阑尾炎相关的影像学表现包括阑尾直径(优势比[OR]=14[>10 vs<6 mm];p=0.002)、阑尾周围脂肪条索(OR=8.9;p<0.001)和阑尾黏膜强化(OR=8.7;p<0.001)。在最初临床检查结果报告为不确定的35例患者中,28例(80%)患有阑尾炎。在这个最初不确定的组中,使用标准化报告系统,放射科医生在28例患有阑尾炎的患者中的21例(75%)中给予了较高的确定性评分(4或5),而在7例未患阑尾炎的患者中的5例(71%)中给予了较低的评分(1或2)(AUC=0.90;p=0.001)。
客观影像学表现的标准化报告和分级与术后病理结果相关性良好,可能会减少报告为阑尾炎不确定的CT表现数量。目前正在对一组临床怀疑为阑尾炎的患者进行该报告系统的前瞻性评估。