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Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study

AIMS: Radiological inappropriateness in medical imaging leads to loss of resources and accumulation of avoidable population cancer risk. Aim of the study was to audit the appropriateness rate of different cardiac radiological examinations. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With a retrospective, observ...

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Autores principales: Carpeggiani, Clara, Marraccini, Paolo, Morales, Maria Aurora, Prediletto, Renato, Landi, Patrizia, Picano, Eugenio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3842240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312272
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081161
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author Carpeggiani, Clara
Marraccini, Paolo
Morales, Maria Aurora
Prediletto, Renato
Landi, Patrizia
Picano, Eugenio
author_facet Carpeggiani, Clara
Marraccini, Paolo
Morales, Maria Aurora
Prediletto, Renato
Landi, Patrizia
Picano, Eugenio
author_sort Carpeggiani, Clara
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Radiological inappropriateness in medical imaging leads to loss of resources and accumulation of avoidable population cancer risk. Aim of the study was to audit the appropriateness rate of different cardiac radiological examinations. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With a retrospective, observational study we reviewed clinical records of 818 consecutive patients (67±12 years, 75% males) admitted from January 1-May 31, 2010 to the National Research Council – Tuscany Region Gabriele Monasterio Foundation cardiology division. A total of 940 procedures were audited: 250 chest x-rays (CXR); 240 coronary computed tomographies (CCT); 250 coronary angiographies (CA); 200 percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). For each test, indications were rated on the basis of guidelines class of recommendation and level of evidence: definitely appropriate (A, including class I, appropriate, and class IIa, probably appropriate), uncertain (U, class IIb, probably inappropriate), or inappropriate (I, class III, definitely inappropriate). Appropriateness was suboptimal for all tests: CXR (A = 48%, U = 10%, I = 42%); CCT (A = 58%, U = 24%, I = 18%); CA (A = 45%, U = 25%, I = 30%); PCI (A = 63%, U = 15%, I = 22%). Top reasons for inappropriateness were: routine on hospital admission (70% of inappropriate CXR); first line application in asymptomatic low-risk patients (42% of CCT) or in patients with unchanged clinical status post-revascularization (20% of CA); PCI in patients either asymptomatic or with miscellaneous symptoms and without inducible ischemia on non-invasive testing (36% of inappropriate PCI). CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Public healthcare system – with universal access paid for with public money – is haemorrhaging significant resources and accumulating avoidable long-term cancer risk with inappropriate cardiovascular imaging prevention.
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spelling pubmed-38422402013-12-05 Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study Carpeggiani, Clara Marraccini, Paolo Morales, Maria Aurora Prediletto, Renato Landi, Patrizia Picano, Eugenio PLoS One Research Article AIMS: Radiological inappropriateness in medical imaging leads to loss of resources and accumulation of avoidable population cancer risk. Aim of the study was to audit the appropriateness rate of different cardiac radiological examinations. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With a retrospective, observational study we reviewed clinical records of 818 consecutive patients (67±12 years, 75% males) admitted from January 1-May 31, 2010 to the National Research Council – Tuscany Region Gabriele Monasterio Foundation cardiology division. A total of 940 procedures were audited: 250 chest x-rays (CXR); 240 coronary computed tomographies (CCT); 250 coronary angiographies (CA); 200 percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). For each test, indications were rated on the basis of guidelines class of recommendation and level of evidence: definitely appropriate (A, including class I, appropriate, and class IIa, probably appropriate), uncertain (U, class IIb, probably inappropriate), or inappropriate (I, class III, definitely inappropriate). Appropriateness was suboptimal for all tests: CXR (A = 48%, U = 10%, I = 42%); CCT (A = 58%, U = 24%, I = 18%); CA (A = 45%, U = 25%, I = 30%); PCI (A = 63%, U = 15%, I = 22%). Top reasons for inappropriateness were: routine on hospital admission (70% of inappropriate CXR); first line application in asymptomatic low-risk patients (42% of CCT) or in patients with unchanged clinical status post-revascularization (20% of CA); PCI in patients either asymptomatic or with miscellaneous symptoms and without inducible ischemia on non-invasive testing (36% of inappropriate PCI). CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: Public healthcare system – with universal access paid for with public money – is haemorrhaging significant resources and accumulating avoidable long-term cancer risk with inappropriate cardiovascular imaging prevention. Public Library of Science 2013-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3842240/ /pubmed/24312272 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081161 Text en © 2013 Carpeggiani 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
Carpeggiani, Clara
Marraccini, Paolo
Morales, Maria Aurora
Prediletto, Renato
Landi, Patrizia
Picano, Eugenio
Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title_full Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title_fullStr Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title_full_unstemmed Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title_short Inappropriateness of Cardiovascular Radiological Imaging Testing; A Tertiary Care Referral Center Study
title_sort inappropriateness of cardiovascular radiological imaging testing; a tertiary care referral center study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3842240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312272
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081161
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