Wang Gary X, Neil Jordan M, Fintelmann Florian J, Little Brent P, Narayan Anand K, Flores Efren J
Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Health Policy Research Center, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2021 Mar;18(3 Pt A):395-405. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2020.08.005. Epub 2020 Sep 6.
It is unclear whether patients and providers have started to knowingly request lung cancer screening (LCS) outside US guidelines and insurance coverage for risk factors besides a history of heavy smoking. The authors analyzed their institution's best practices advisory (BPA) clinical decision support system to determine whether providers knowingly order guideline-discordant LCS and the indications given.
CT examinations ordered for LCS at an academic medical center that triggered BPA alerts from November 2018 to December 2019 were reviewed. Alerts were triggered by attempts to order examinations outside Medicare coverage, which resembles most US guidelines. Providers can override alerts to order the examinations. Primary outcomes were the number of examinations performed using orders with overridden BPA alerts and indications given. Qualitative exploratory and directed content analyses identified motivators and decision-making processes that drove guideline-discordant screening use.
Forty-two patients underwent guideline-discordant LCS, constituting 1.9% of all patients screened (42 of 2,248): 42.9% (18 of 42) were <54 or >77 years old, 14.3% (6 of 42) had never smoked, 40.5% (17 of 42) had quit >15 years earlier, and 31% (13 of 42) had smoked <30 pack-years; 45.2% (19 of 42) fell outside all US guidelines. The most common indication was a family history of lung cancer (21.4% [9 of 42]). Perceptions of elevated cancer risk from both patients and referring providers drove guideline-discordant screening use.
Referring providers knowingly ordered screening CT examinations outside Medicare coverage and US guidelines, including for never smokers, for indications including a family history of lung cancer. LCS programs may need tailored strategies to guide these patients and providers, such as help with cancer risk assessment.
目前尚不清楚患者和医疗服务提供者是否已开始在明知的情况下,在美国指南和除重度吸烟史以外的风险因素保险覆盖范围之外要求进行肺癌筛查(LCS)。作者分析了他们机构的最佳实践建议(BPA)临床决策支持系统,以确定医疗服务提供者是否在明知的情况下开出不符合指南的LCS检查单以及给出的指征。
回顾了2018年11月至2019年12月在一家学术医疗中心因LCS而开具的触发BPA警报的CT检查。警报是由试图开出超出医疗保险覆盖范围的检查单触发的,这与大多数美国指南类似。医疗服务提供者可以忽略警报来开出检查单。主要结果是使用被忽略的BPA警报的检查单进行的检查数量以及给出的指征。定性探索性和定向内容分析确定了推动不符合指南的筛查使用的动机和决策过程。
42例患者接受了不符合指南的LCS,占所有筛查患者的1.9%(2248例中的42例):42.9%(42例中的18例)年龄小于54岁或大于77岁,14.3%(42例中的6例)从不吸烟,40.5%(42例中的17例)在15年多以前戒烟,31%(42例中的13例)吸烟少于30包年;45.2%(42例中的19例)不符合所有美国指南。最常见的指征是肺癌家族史(21.4%[42例中的9例])。患者和转诊医疗服务提供者对癌症风险升高的认知推动了不符合指南的筛查使用。
转诊医疗服务提供者在明知的情况下开出了超出医疗保险覆盖范围和美国指南的筛查CT检查单,包括为从不吸烟者开具,指征包括肺癌家族史。LCS项目可能需要量身定制的策略来指导这些患者和医疗服务提供者,例如帮助进行癌症风险评估。