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Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin

BACKGROUND: Autopsy rates in Western countries consistently decline to an average of <5%, although clinical autopsies represent a reasonable tool for quality control in hospitals, medically and economically. Comparing pre- and postmortal diagnoses, diagnostic discrepancies as uncovered by clinica...

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Autores principales: Wittschieber, Daniel, Klauschen, Frederick, Kimmritz, Anna-Christin, von Winterfeld, Moritz, Kamphues, Carsten, Scholman, Hans-Joachim, Erbersdobler, Andreas, Pfeiffer, Heidi, Denkert, Carsten, Dietel, Manfred, Weichert, Wilko, Budczies, Jan, Stenzinger, Albrecht
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3358345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629399
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037460
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author Wittschieber, Daniel
Klauschen, Frederick
Kimmritz, Anna-Christin
von Winterfeld, Moritz
Kamphues, Carsten
Scholman, Hans-Joachim
Erbersdobler, Andreas
Pfeiffer, Heidi
Denkert, Carsten
Dietel, Manfred
Weichert, Wilko
Budczies, Jan
Stenzinger, Albrecht
author_facet Wittschieber, Daniel
Klauschen, Frederick
Kimmritz, Anna-Christin
von Winterfeld, Moritz
Kamphues, Carsten
Scholman, Hans-Joachim
Erbersdobler, Andreas
Pfeiffer, Heidi
Denkert, Carsten
Dietel, Manfred
Weichert, Wilko
Budczies, Jan
Stenzinger, Albrecht
author_sort Wittschieber, Daniel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Autopsy rates in Western countries consistently decline to an average of <5%, although clinical autopsies represent a reasonable tool for quality control in hospitals, medically and economically. Comparing pre- and postmortal diagnoses, diagnostic discrepancies as uncovered by clinical autopsies supply crucial information on how to improve clinical treatment. The study aimed at analyzing current diagnostic discrepancy rates, investigating their influencing factors and identifying risk profiles of patients that could be affected by a diagnostic discrepancy. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Of all adult autopsy cases of the Charité Institute of Pathology from the years 1988, 1993, 1998, 2003 and 2008, the pre- and postmortal diagnoses and all demographic data were analyzed retrospectively. Based on power analysis, 1,800 cases were randomly selected to perform discrepancy classification (class I-VI) according to modified Goldman criteria. The rate of discrepancies in major diagnoses (class I) was 10.7% (95% CI: 7.7%–14.7%) in 2008 representing a reduction by 15.1%. Subgroup analysis revealed several influencing factors to significantly correlate with the discrepancy rate. Cardiovascular diseases had the highest frequency among class-I-discrepancies. Comparing the 1988-data of East- and West-Berlin, no significant differences were found in diagnostic discrepancies despite an autopsy rate differing by nearly 50%. A risk profile analysis visualized by intuitive heatmaps revealed a significantly high discrepancy rate in patients treated in low or intermediate care units at community hospitals. In this collective, patients with genitourinary/renal or infectious diseases were at particularly high risk. CONCLUSIONS: This is the current largest and most comprehensive study on diagnostic discrepancies worldwide. Our well-powered analysis revealed a significant rate of class-I-discrepancies indicating that autopsies are still of value. The identified risk profiles may aid both pathologists and clinicians to identify patients at increased risk for a discrepant diagnosis and possibly suboptimal treatment intra vitam.
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spelling pubmed-33583452012-05-24 Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin Wittschieber, Daniel Klauschen, Frederick Kimmritz, Anna-Christin von Winterfeld, Moritz Kamphues, Carsten Scholman, Hans-Joachim Erbersdobler, Andreas Pfeiffer, Heidi Denkert, Carsten Dietel, Manfred Weichert, Wilko Budczies, Jan Stenzinger, Albrecht PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Autopsy rates in Western countries consistently decline to an average of <5%, although clinical autopsies represent a reasonable tool for quality control in hospitals, medically and economically. Comparing pre- and postmortal diagnoses, diagnostic discrepancies as uncovered by clinical autopsies supply crucial information on how to improve clinical treatment. The study aimed at analyzing current diagnostic discrepancy rates, investigating their influencing factors and identifying risk profiles of patients that could be affected by a diagnostic discrepancy. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Of all adult autopsy cases of the Charité Institute of Pathology from the years 1988, 1993, 1998, 2003 and 2008, the pre- and postmortal diagnoses and all demographic data were analyzed retrospectively. Based on power analysis, 1,800 cases were randomly selected to perform discrepancy classification (class I-VI) according to modified Goldman criteria. The rate of discrepancies in major diagnoses (class I) was 10.7% (95% CI: 7.7%–14.7%) in 2008 representing a reduction by 15.1%. Subgroup analysis revealed several influencing factors to significantly correlate with the discrepancy rate. Cardiovascular diseases had the highest frequency among class-I-discrepancies. Comparing the 1988-data of East- and West-Berlin, no significant differences were found in diagnostic discrepancies despite an autopsy rate differing by nearly 50%. A risk profile analysis visualized by intuitive heatmaps revealed a significantly high discrepancy rate in patients treated in low or intermediate care units at community hospitals. In this collective, patients with genitourinary/renal or infectious diseases were at particularly high risk. CONCLUSIONS: This is the current largest and most comprehensive study on diagnostic discrepancies worldwide. Our well-powered analysis revealed a significant rate of class-I-discrepancies indicating that autopsies are still of value. The identified risk profiles may aid both pathologists and clinicians to identify patients at increased risk for a discrepant diagnosis and possibly suboptimal treatment intra vitam. Public Library of Science 2012-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3358345/ /pubmed/22629399 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037460 Text en Wittschieber et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wittschieber, Daniel
Klauschen, Frederick
Kimmritz, Anna-Christin
von Winterfeld, Moritz
Kamphues, Carsten
Scholman, Hans-Joachim
Erbersdobler, Andreas
Pfeiffer, Heidi
Denkert, Carsten
Dietel, Manfred
Weichert, Wilko
Budczies, Jan
Stenzinger, Albrecht
Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title_full Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title_fullStr Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title_full_unstemmed Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title_short Who Is at Risk for Diagnostic Discrepancies? Comparison of Pre- and Postmortal Diagnoses in 1800 Patients of 3 Medical Decades in East and West Berlin
title_sort who is at risk for diagnostic discrepancies? comparison of pre- and postmortal diagnoses in 1800 patients of 3 medical decades in east and west berlin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3358345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629399
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037460
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