Mazer Laura M, Méan Marie, Tapper Elliot B
*Goodman Surgical Education Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA †Department of Internal Medicine, Lausanne University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland ‡Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Division of Gastroenterology/Hepatology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
J Clin Gastroenterol. 2017 Aug;51(7):632-638. doi: 10.1097/MCG.0000000000000775.
Traditional coagulopathic indices, including elevated international normalized ratio, do not correlate with bleeding risk in patients with cirrhosis. For this reason, head computed tomography (CT) has a low yield in cirrhotic patients with altered mental status and no trauma history. The initial diagnostic evaluation, however, is often made by nongastroenterologists influenced by the so-called "coagulopathy of cirrhosis." We sought to examine the prevalence, impact, and malleability of this perception in an international, multispecialty cohort.
An electronic survey was distributed to internal medicine, surgery, emergency medicine, and gastroenterology physicians. Respondents were presented with a cirrhotic patient with hepatic encephalopathy, no history of trauma, and a nonfocal neurological examination. Respondents rated likelihood to order head CT at presentation, after obtaining labs [international normalized ratio (INR) 2.4 and platelets 59×10/μL], and finally after reading the results of a study demonstrating the low yield of head CT in this setting.
In total, 1286 physicians from 6 countries, 84% from the United States. Of these, 62% were from internal medicine, 25% from emergency medicine, 8% from gastroenterology, and 5% from surgery. Totally, 47% of respondents were attending physicians. At each timepoint, emergency physicians were more likely, and gastroenterologists less likely, to scan than all other specialties (P<0.0001). Evidence on the low yield of head CT reduced likelihood to scan for all specialties. Qualitative analysis of open-ended comments confirmed that concern for "coagulopathy of cirrhosis" motivated CT orders.
Perceptions regarding the coagulopathy of cirrhosis, which vary across specialties, impact clinical decision-making. Exposure to clinical evidence has the potential to change practice patterns.
传统的凝血指标,包括国际标准化比值升高,与肝硬化患者的出血风险并无关联。因此,对于肝硬化且精神状态改变但无创伤史的患者,头部计算机断层扫描(CT)的诊断价值较低。然而,初始诊断评估通常由受所谓“肝硬化凝血障碍”影响的非胃肠病学医生进行。我们试图在一个国际多专业队列中研究这种认知的患病率、影响及可塑性。
向内科、外科、急诊医学和胃肠病学医生发放电子调查问卷。向受访者展示一名患有肝性脑病、无创伤史且神经系统检查无局灶性病变的肝硬化患者。受访者分别对初诊时、获取实验室检查结果(国际标准化比值[INR]为2.4,血小板计数为59×10⁹/μL)后以及最终阅读一项表明在此情况下头部CT诊断价值较低的研究结果后开具头部CT检查的可能性进行评分。
共有来自6个国家的1286名医生参与,其中84%来自美国。其中,62%来自内科,25%来自急诊医学,8%来自胃肠病学,5%来自外科。共有47%的受访者为主治医生。在每个时间点,急诊医生比所有其他专科医生更倾向于开具CT检查,而胃肠病学医生则更不倾向于开具(P<0.0001)。关于头部CT诊断价值较低的证据降低了所有专科医生开具CT检查的可能性。对开放式评论的定性分析证实,对“肝硬化凝血障碍”的担忧促使了CT检查的开具。
不同专科对肝硬化凝血障碍的认知存在差异,这会影响临床决策。接触临床证据有可能改变实践模式。