Mj. Gollub et al., Clinical importance of reinterpretation of body CT scans obtained elsewhere in patients referred for care at a tertiary cancer center, RADIOLOGY, 210(1), 1999, pp. 109-112
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Radiology ,Nuclear Medicine & Imaging","Medical Research Diagnosis & Treatment
PURPOSE: To determine the frequency and clinical importance of discordance
between the initial interpretation of computed tomographic (CT) scans of th
e body and subsequent interpretations in patients with biopsy-proved cancer
.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The initial and reinterpretation reports for 213 CT
scans of the body submitted for official review were compared independently
by two radiologists. Sixty-nine sets of reports were excluded because the
reviewing radiologists and the outside radiologists had prior CT scans from
differing dates to use for comparison. One set of reports was excluded bec
ause of lack of clinical follow-up.
RESULTS: The interpretations were graded as "agree" in 90 patients (63%), "
major disagreement" in 24 patients (17%), and "minor disagreement" in 29 pa
tients (20%). A theoretic change in treatment could have occurred in nine o
f 53 cases of disagreement (17%). An actual change in treatment occurred in
five of 53 cases of disagreement (9%).
CONCLUSION: Discordant interpretations were frequent (53 of 143 cases [37%]
), were often major (24 of 143 cases [17%]), and resulted in actual treatme
nt changes in five of all 143 cases (3%). Reinterpretation of body CT scans
can have a substantial effect on the clinical care of individual patients
with proved malignancy.