Radiology Quality and Safety Officer, Department of Radiology, Center for Evidence-Based Imaging, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; and Department of Imaging, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Radiology, Center for Evidence-Based Imaging, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; and Oncologic Imaging Fellow, Department of Imaging, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2023 Apr;20(4):431-437. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2022.12.021. Epub 2023 Feb 24.
Determine the rate of documented notification, via an alert, for intra-institutional discrepant radiologist opinions and addended reports and resulting clinical management changes.
This institutional review board-exempt, retrospective study was performed at a large academic medical center. We defined an intra-institutional discrepant opinion as when a consultant radiologist provides a different interpretation from that formally rendered by a colleague at our institution. We implemented a discrepant opinion policy requiring closed-loop notification of the consulting radiologist's second opinion to the original radiologist, who must acknowledge this alert within 30 days. This study included all discrepant opinion alerts created December 1, 2019, to December 31, 2021, of which two radiologists and an internal medicine physician performed consensus review. Primary outcomes were degree of discrepancy and percent of discrepant opinions leading to change in clinical management. Secondary outcome was report addendum rate compared with an existing peer learning program using Fisher's exact test.
Of 114 discrepant opinion alerts among 1,888,147 reports generated during the study period (0.006%), 58 alerts were categorized as major (50.9%), 41 as moderate (36.0%), and 15 as minor discrepancies (13.1%). Clinical management change occurred in 64 of 114 cases (56.1%). Report addendum rate for discrepant opinion alerts was 4-fold higher than for peer learning alerts at our institution (66 of 315 = 21% versus 432 of 8,273 =5.2%; P < .0001).
Although discrepant intra-institutional radiologist second opinions were rare, they frequently led to changes in clinical management. Capturing these discrepancies by encouraging alert use may help optimize patient care and document what was communicated to the referring or consulting care team by consulting radiologists.
通过警报确定记录在案的机构内意见不一致的放射科医生意见和附加报告的通知率,并评估由此导致的临床管理变化。
这项经机构审查委员会豁免的回顾性研究在一家大型学术医疗中心进行。我们将机构内意见不一致定义为顾问放射科医生提供的解释与本院同事正式提供的解释不同。我们实施了一项不一致意见政策,要求将顾问放射科医生的第二意见以闭环方式通知原始放射科医生,原始放射科医生必须在 30 天内确认收到此警报。这项研究包括 2019 年 12 月 1 日至 2021 年 12 月 31 日期间创建的所有不一致意见警报,其中两位放射科医生和一位内科医生进行了共识审查。主要结果是差异程度和导致临床管理变化的不一致意见百分比。次要结果是与我们机构中现有的同行学习计划相比,报告附加率使用 Fisher 精确检验进行比较。
在研究期间生成的 1888147 份报告中,有 114 份不一致意见警报(0.006%),其中 58 份被归类为重大(50.9%),41 份为中度(36.0%),15 份为轻度差异(13.1%)。114 例中有 64 例(56.1%)发生临床管理变化。不一致意见警报的报告附加率是我们机构中同行学习警报的 4 倍(315 例中的 66 例[21%]与 8273 例中的 432 例[5.2%];P <.0001)。
尽管机构内意见不一致的放射科医生的第二意见很少见,但它们经常导致临床管理的变化。通过鼓励使用警报来捕捉这些差异,可能有助于优化患者护理,并记录顾问放射科医生向转诊或咨询护理团队传达的内容。