Snow Aisling, Milliren Carly E, Graham Dionne A, Callahan Michael J, MacDougall Robert D, Robertson Richard L, Taylor George A
Department of Radiology, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Department of Radiology, Our Lady's Children's Hospital, Crumlin, Dublin, Ireland.
Pediatr Radiol. 2017 Apr;47(4):391-397. doi: 10.1007/s00247-016-3768-7. Epub 2017 Jan 13.
Pediatric patients requiring transfer to a dedicated children's hospital from an outside institution may undergo CT imaging as part of their evaluation. Whether this imaging is performed prior to or after transfer has been shown to impact the radiation dose imparted to the patient. Other quality variables could also be affected by the pediatric experience and expertise of the scanning institution.
To identify differences in quality between abdominal CT scans and reports performed at a dedicated children's hospital, and those performed at referring institutions.
Fifty consecutive pediatric abdominal CT scans performed at outside institutions were matched (for age, gender and indication) with 50 CT scans performed at a dedicated freestanding children's hospital. We analyzed the scans for technical parameters, report findings, correlation with final clinical diagnosis, and clinical utility. Technical evaluation included use of intravenous and oral contrast agents, anatomical coverage, number of scan phases and size-specific dose estimate (SSDE) for each scan. Outside institution scans were re-reported when the child was admitted to the children's hospital; they were also re-interpreted for this study by children's hospital radiologists who were provided with only the referral information given in the outside institution's report. Anonymized original outside institutional reports and children's hospital admission re-reports were analyzed by two emergency medicine physicians for ease of understanding, degree to which the clinical question was answered, and level of confidence in the report.
Mean SSDE was lower (8.68) for children's hospital scans, as compared to outside institution scans (13.29, P = 0.03). Concordance with final clinical diagnosis was significantly lower for original outside institution reports (38/48, 79%) than for both the admission and study children's hospital reports (48/50, 96%; P = 0.005). Children's hospital admission reports were rated higher than outside institution reports for completeness, ease of understanding, answering of clinical question, and level of confidence of the report (P < 0.001).
Pediatric abdominal CT scans performed and interpreted at a dedicated children's hospital are associated with higher technical quality, lower radiation dose and a more clinically useful report than those performed at referring institutions.
需要从外部机构转至专科医院的儿科患者在评估过程中可能会接受CT成像检查。研究表明,这种成像检查在转院之前还是之后进行会影响患者所接受的辐射剂量。其他质量变量也可能会受到扫描机构儿科经验和专业水平的影响。
确定专科医院与转诊机构进行的腹部CT扫描及报告在质量上的差异。
将外部机构连续进行的50例儿科腹部CT扫描(根据年龄、性别和适应症)与一家独立专科医院进行的50例CT扫描进行匹配。我们分析了扫描的技术参数、报告结果、与最终临床诊断的相关性以及临床实用性。技术评估包括静脉内和口服对比剂的使用、解剖覆盖范围、扫描期数以及每次扫描的特定体型剂量估计(SSDE)。当儿童入住儿童医院时,对外部机构的扫描报告进行重新撰写;本研究中,儿童医院的放射科医生也仅根据外部机构报告中给出的转诊信息对这些扫描进行重新解读。两名急诊医学医生对匿名的外部机构原始报告和儿童医院入院时的重新报告进行分析,评估其易理解程度、临床问题的解答程度以及报告的可信度。
儿童医院扫描的平均SSDE较低(8.68),而外部机构扫描的平均SSDE为13.29(P = 0.03)。外部机构原始报告与最终临床诊断的一致性(38/48,79%)显著低于儿童医院入院报告和本研究报告(48/50,96%;P = 0.005)。儿童医院入院报告在完整性、易理解程度、临床问题解答以及报告可信度方面的评分均高于外部机构报告(P < 0.001)。
与转诊机构进行的儿科腹部CT扫描相比,在专科医院进行并解读的扫描具有更高的技术质量、更低的辐射剂量以及更具临床实用性的报告。