Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Acad Emerg Med. 2018 Jun;25(6):614-626. doi: 10.1111/acem.13376. Epub 2018 Feb 19.
Low back pain (LBP) is an extremely frequent reason for patients to present to an emergency department (ED). Despite evidence against the utility of imaging, simple and advanced imaging (i.e., computed tomography [CT], magnetic resonance imaging) for patients with LBP has become increasingly frequent in the ED. The objective of this review was to identify and examine the effectiveness of interventions aimed at reducing image ordering in the ED for LBP patients.
A protocol was developed a priori, following the PRISMA guidelines, and registered with PROSPERO. Six bibliographic databases (including MEDLINE, EMBASE, EBM Reviews, SCOPUS, CINAHL, and Dissertation Abstracts) and the gray literature were searched. Comparative studies assessing interventions that targeted image ordering in the ED for adult patients with LBP were eligible for inclusion. Two reviewers independently screened study eligibility and completed data extraction. Study quality was completed independently by two reviewers using the before-after quality assessment checklist, with a third-party mediator resolving any differences. Due to a limited number of studies and significant heterogeneity, only a descriptive analysis was performed.
The search yielded 603 unique citations of which a total of five before-after studies were included. Quality assessment identified potential biases relating to comparability between the pre- and postintervention groups, reliable assessment of outcomes, and an overall lack of information on the intervention (i.e., time point, description, intervention data collection). The type of interventions utilized included clinical decision support tools, clinical practice guidelines, a knowledge translation initiative, and multidisciplinary protocols. Overall, four studies reported a decrease in the relative percentage change in imaging in a specific image modality (22.7%-47.4%) following implementation of the interventions; however, one study reported a 35% increase in patient referrals to radiography, while another study reported a subsequent 15.4% increase in referrals to CT and myelography after implementing an intervention which reduced referrals for simple radiography.
While imaging of LBP has been identified as a key area of imaging overuse (e.g., Choosing Wisely recommendation), evidence on interventions to reduce image ordering for ED patients with LBP is sparse. There is some evidence to suggest that interventions can reduce the use of simple imaging in LBP in the ED; however, a shift in imaging modality has also been demonstrated. Additional studies employing higher-quality methods and measuring intervention fidelity are strongly recommended to further explore the potential of ED-based interventions to reduce image ordering for this patient population.
下腰痛(LBP)是患者到急诊科就诊的极其常见的原因。尽管有证据表明影像学检查没有用处,但对于 LBP 患者的简单和高级影像学检查(例如,计算机断层扫描 [CT]、磁共振成像)在急诊科中变得越来越频繁。本综述的目的是确定和检查旨在减少急诊科 LBP 患者影像检查的干预措施的有效性。
根据 PRISMA 指南预先制定了方案,并在 PROSPERO 上进行了注册。检索了六个文献数据库(包括 MEDLINE、EMBASE、EBM Reviews、SCOPUS、CINAHL 和 Dissertation Abstracts)和灰色文献。符合纳入标准的研究是评估针对成人 LBP 患者在急诊科进行影像检查的干预措施的比较研究。两名审查员独立筛选研究的纳入情况并完成数据提取。两名审查员使用前后质量评估清单独立完成研究质量评估,由第三方调解员解决任何差异。由于研究数量有限且存在很大的异质性,因此仅进行了描述性分析。
搜索产生了 603 条独特的引文,其中共有五项前后对照研究被纳入。质量评估确定了潜在的偏倚,涉及干预前后组之间的可比性、结局的可靠评估以及干预措施总体缺乏信息(即干预的时间点、描述、干预数据收集)。所使用的干预措施类型包括临床决策支持工具、临床实践指南、知识转化倡议和多学科协议。总体而言,四项研究报告称,在实施干预措施后,特定影像模式的影像相对百分比变化减少了(22.7%-47.4%);然而,一项研究报告称,放射摄影的患者转诊增加了 35%,另一项研究报告称,在实施减少简单放射摄影转诊的干预措施后,CT 和脊髓造影的转诊增加了 15.4%。
虽然 LBP 的影像学检查已被确定为影像学过度使用的一个关键领域(例如,明智选择推荐),但针对急诊科 LBP 患者减少影像检查的干预措施的证据很少。有一些证据表明,干预措施可以减少急诊科 LBP 患者简单影像学检查的使用;然而,也已经证明了影像学模式的转变。强烈建议采用更高质量的方法和测量干预措施忠实度的额外研究,以进一步探索基于急诊科的干预措施在减少该患者人群的影像检查方面的潜力。