From the Medical Imaging Center, Department of Radiology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands
From the Medical Imaging Center, Department of Radiology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2021 Sep;42(9):1676-1682. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A7197. Epub 2021 Jul 8.
Second opinion reports of neurologic head and neck imaging are requested with increased regularity, and they may contain a recommendation to the clinician. Our aim was to investigate the frequency and determinants of the presence of a recommendation and the adherence by the referring physician to the recommendation in a second opinion neurology head and neck imaging report and the diagnostic yield of these recommendations.
This retrospective study included 994 consecutive second opinion reports of neurology head and neck imaging examinations performed at a tertiary care center.
Of the 994 second opinion reports, 12.2% (121/994) contained a recommendation. An oncologic imaging indication was significantly (= .030) associated with a lower chance of a recommendation in the second opinion report (OR = .67; 95% CI, 0.46-0.96). Clinicians followed 65.7% (88/134) of the recommendations. None of the investigated variables (patient age, sex, hospitalization status, indication for the second opinion report, experience of the radiologist who signed the second opinion report, strength of the recommendation, and whether the recommendation was made due to apparent quality issues of the original examination) were significantly associated with the compliance of the referring physician to this recommendation. The 134 individual recommendations eventually led to the establishment of 52 (38.2%) benign diagnoses and 28 (20.6%) malignant diagnoses, while no definitive diagnosis could be established in 56 (41.2%) cases.
Recommendations are relatively common in second opinion reports of neurology head and neck imaging examinations, though less for oncologic indications. They are mostly followed by requesting physicians, thus affecting patient management. In most cases, they also lead to the establishment of a diagnosis, hence adding value to patient care.
神经头颈部影像学的第二意见报告的需求日益增加,且其中可能包含对临床医生的建议。我们的目的是研究神经头颈部影像学第二意见报告中建议的存在频率及其决定因素,以及临床医生对这些建议的遵从性和这些建议的诊断效果。
这项回顾性研究纳入了在一家三级医疗中心进行的 994 例连续神经头颈部影像学检查的第二意见报告。
在 994 例第二意见报告中,12.2%(121/994)包含了建议。肿瘤影像学指征与第二意见报告中建议的可能性降低显著相关(OR=0.67;95%CI,0.46-0.96)。临床医生遵循了 65.7%(88/134)的建议。未发现任何调查变量(患者年龄、性别、住院状态、第二意见报告的指征、签署第二意见报告的放射科医生的经验、建议的强度,以及建议是否由于原始检查的明显质量问题而提出)与临床医生对该建议的遵从性显著相关。134 项个别建议最终导致 52 项(38.2%)良性诊断和 28 项(20.6%)恶性诊断,而 56 项(41.2%)无法明确诊断。
神经头颈部影像学的第二意见报告中建议较为常见,但对于肿瘤指征的建议较少。这些建议通常会被请求医生采纳,从而影响患者的管理。在大多数情况下,它们也能建立诊断,从而为患者护理增加价值。