Kara Stephen, Smart Alexandra, Officer Tara, Dassanayake Chan, Clark Phil, Smit Amy, Cavadino Alana
ProCare PHO, Level 2/110 Stanley St, Grafton, Auckland 1143, New Zealand; and Corresponding author. Email:
ProCare PHO, Level 2/110 Stanley St, Grafton, Auckland 1143, New Zealand.
J Prim Health Care. 2019 Sep;11(3):235-242. doi: 10.1071/HC19034.
INTRODUCTION Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an accurate diagnostic test used mainly in secondary care. Uncertainty exists regarding the ability of general practitioners (GPs) to use direct access high-tech imaging pathways appropriately when managing musculoskeletal injury. AIM To evaluate the use of primary care-centric guidelines, training and quality assurance on the appropriateness of GP MRI referrals for patients with selected musculoskeletal injuries. METHODS This is an 18-month primary care retrospective study. GPs participated in clinical musculoskeletal training, enabling patient referral for MRI on four body sites. Two reviewers categorised referral appropriateness independently, and reviewer inter-rater agreement between categorisations was measured. MRI results and patient management pathways were described. Associations of scan status and patient management were examined using logistic regression. RESULTS In total, 273 GPs from 72 practices attended training sessions to receive MRI referral accreditation. Of these, 150 (55%) GPs requested 550 MRI scans, with 527 (96%) eligible for analysis, resulting in 86% considered appropriate; 79% consistent with guidelines and 7% clinically useful but for conditions outside of guidelines. Inter-rater agreement was 75%. Cohen's weighted kappa statistic was 0.38 (95% CI: 0.28-0.48). MRI referrals consistent with guidelines were more likely to show pathology requiring specialist intervention (reviewer 1: odds ratio=2.64, 95% CI 1.51-4.62; reviewer 2: odds ratio=4.44, 95% CI 2.47-7.99), compared to scan requests graded not consistent. DISCUSSION Study findings indicate GPs use decision support guidance well, and this has resulted in appropriate MRI referrals and higher specialist intervention rates for selected conditions.
引言
磁共振成像(MRI)是一种主要用于二级医疗保健的准确诊断测试。在管理肌肉骨骼损伤时,全科医生(GP)能否恰当地使用直接获取高科技成像途径存在不确定性。
目的
评估以初级保健为中心的指南、培训和质量保证对全科医生为选定肌肉骨骼损伤患者进行MRI转诊的适宜性。
方法
这是一项为期18个月的初级保健回顾性研究。全科医生参加了临床肌肉骨骼培训,可将患者转诊至四个身体部位进行MRI检查。两名评审员独立对转诊适宜性进行分类,并测量分类之间的评审员评分者间一致性。描述了MRI结果和患者管理途径。使用逻辑回归分析扫描状态与患者管理之间的关联。
结果
来自72家诊所的273名全科医生参加了培训课程以获得MRI转诊认证。其中,150名(55%)全科医生请求进行了550次MRI扫描,其中527次(96%)符合分析条件,86%被认为是合适的;79%符合指南,7%在临床上有用但针对指南以外的情况。评分者间一致性为75%。科恩加权kappa统计量为0.38(95%置信区间:0.28 - 0.48)。与分级为不符合的扫描请求相比,符合指南的MRI转诊更有可能显示需要专科干预的病变(评审员1:优势比 = 2.64,95%置信区间1.51 - 4.62;评审员2:优势比 = 4.44,95%置信区间2.47 - 7.99)。
讨论
研究结果表明全科医生很好地使用了决策支持指南,这导致了对选定病症的适当MRI转诊和更高的专科干预率。