Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
J Craniofac Surg. 2021 Oct 1;32(7):2496-2499. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000007926.
Cranial CT is routinely taught to be the gold standard for diagnosis of craniosynostosis and used by craniofacial teams for suspected nonsyndromic single suture craniosynostosis. Given the risks associated with infant CTs, do these scans provide significantly enhanced diagnostic accuracy compared to the physical exam when performed by an experienced clinical provider?
A retrospective chart review was performed for children who underwent corrective surgery for nonsyndromic, single-suture craniosynostosis over an 11 year period by a single craniofacial team. Ages at presentation and surgery, preoperative clinical diagnosis and imaging, co-existing radiographic findings, and correlation with the intraoperative diagnosis were analyzed.
A total of 138 patients were included in this study. The mean age was 4.2 months at initial craniofacial evaluation, and 8.0 months at time of surgery. Twenty-seven patients received imaging prior to our clinic. Of those, 21 had plain radiography and 6 had CT scans. Of the remaining 111 patients referred without imaging, craniosynostosis was clinically diagnosed in 102 (92%), whereas 9 (8%) had an unclear clinical diagnosis. Of these 9, 1 (1%) was diagnosed clinically at follow-up exam, and the remaining 8 (7%) were diagnosed using radiography (3 CT scans, 5 plain radiographs). In all patients, the preoperative diagnosis was confirmed during intraoperative assessment.
Cranial CT was not needed by experienced craniofacial providers in 93% of nonsyndromic, single-suture craniosynostosis. Imaging obtained before craniofacial clinic referral may have been unnecessary. These findings question the classic teaching that preoperative cranial CT is the gold standard for diagnosis in infants with nonsyndromic, single-suture craniosynostosis.
头颅 CT 通常被认为是颅缝早闭诊断的金标准,颅面团队也将其用于疑似非综合征性单一颅缝早闭的病例。鉴于婴儿 CT 检查存在相关风险,那么在由经验丰富的临床医生进行检查时,与体格检查相比,这些扫描是否能显著提高诊断准确性?
对 11 年间由单一颅面团队为非综合征性单一颅缝早闭儿童施行矫正手术的病例进行了回顾性图表分析。分析内容包括就诊时和手术时的年龄、术前临床诊断和影像学检查、并存的影像学发现以及与术中诊断的相关性。
本研究共纳入 138 例患者。初次颅面评估时的平均年龄为 4.2 个月,手术时的平均年龄为 8.0 个月。27 例患者在来我院就诊前进行了影像学检查。其中,21 例行普通 X 线检查,6 例行 CT 检查。在其余 111 例未行影像学检查的患者中,102 例(92%)临床诊断为颅缝早闭,9 例(8%)临床诊断不明确。这 9 例中,1 例(1%)在随访检查时临床确诊,其余 8 例(7%)通过影像学检查(3 例 CT 扫描,5 例普通 X 线片)确诊。所有患者的术前诊断均在术中评估时得到了证实。
在 93%的非综合征性单一颅缝早闭病例中,经验丰富的颅面医生不需要进行头颅 CT 检查。在转诊至颅面科之前获得的影像学检查可能是不必要的。这些发现对术前头颅 CT 是诊断非综合征性单一颅缝早闭婴儿的金标准这一经典理论提出了质疑。