Quality Control in Neuroradiology: Discrepancies in Image Interpretation among Academic Neuroradiologists

被引:37
作者
Babiarz, L. S. [1 ]
Yousem, D. M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Med Inst, Dept Radiol & Radiol Sci, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
关键词
TERTIARY TRAUMA SURVEY; EARLY MISSED INJURIES; DIAGNOSTIC-PROCEDURES; EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT; RADIOLOGY RESIDENT; 5; DECADES; RADIOGRAPHS; ACCURACY; SEARCH; SATISFACTION;
D O I
10.3174/ajnr.A2704
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Prior studies have found a 3%-6% clinically significant error rate in radiology practice. We set out to assess discrepancy rates between subspecialty-trained university-based neuroradiologists. Over 17 months, university neuroradiologists randomly reviewed 1000 studies and reports of previously read examinations of patients in whom follow-up studies were read. The discrepancies between the original and "second opinion" reports were scored according to a 5-point scale: 1, no change; 2, clinically insignificant detection discrepancy; 3, clinically insignificant interpretation discrepancy; 4, clinically significant detection discrepancy; and 5, clinically significant interpretation discrepancy. Of the 1000 studies, 876 (87.6%) showed agreements with the original report. The neuroradiology division had a 2.0% (20/1000; 95% CI, 1.1%-2.9%) rate of clinically significant discrepancies involving 8 CTs and 12 MR images. Discrepancies were classified as vascular (n = 7), neoplastic (n = 9), congenital (n = 2), and artifacts (n = 2). Individual neuroradiologist's scores ranged from 0% to 7.7% +/- 2.3% (n = 18). Both CT and MR imaging studies had a discrepancy rate of 2.0%. Our quality assessment study could serve as initial data before intervention as part of a PQI project.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 42
页数:6
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