影响脑卒中代码激活时CTA头颈部报告及时性的放射科医生、受训人员和后勤因素。

Omar A Zaree, Jeffers K Nguyen, Irene Dixe de Oliveira Santo, Ahmed E Kertam, Saeed Rahmani, Jason Johnson, Long H Tu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景与目的:及时报告CTA检查影响急性血管病变的处理,如大血管闭塞、动脉夹层、动脉瘤破裂以及各种急性非血管病变。在这项研究中,我们研究了影响中风代码激活时CTA报告及时性的潜在可修改因素。材料与方法:在单一卫生系统(3个急诊科,1550张住院床位)进行为期四年(2019年1月1日- 2023年12月31日)的脑卒中代码CTA头颈部检查的观察性研究。患者年龄、患者性别、护理环境、一年中的时间、轮班类型、实习/主治放射科医生特征、报告因素和前一小时内进行的cta次数被认为是影响卒中代码cta的中转时间(TAT)的潜在因素。使用描述性统计、单变量回归和多变量回归来估计对报告TAT的影响。结果:共完成8422例脑卒中代码CTA检查。中位TAT为29分钟(IQR 18-48)。个别主治放射科医生的TAT中位数从15到40分钟不等(中位数为29分钟[IQR 26-34.5])。单变量回归分析发现,较低的患者年龄、急诊科设置、学年较晚的时间、非营业时间、特定的放射科医生/培训生、主治放射科医生的单独报告、初步报告的使用以及前一小时内较少的卒中代码,都与较短的TATs相关(所有结论:放射科医生和培训生在卒中CTA报告中的及时性差异很大)。旨在提高培训生和主治放射科医生工作流程效率的干预措施可以提高报告的及时性。缩写:IQR,四分位间距;TAT,周转时间;TFR,到最后报告时间了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Radiologist, Trainee, and Logistical Factors Impacting the Timeliness of CTA Head and Neck Reporting in Stroke Code Activations.

Background and purpose: Timely reporting of CTA examinations impacts management of acute vascular pathology such as large vessel occlusions, arterial dissection, and ruptured aneurysms, as well as a variety of acute nonvascular pathologies. In this study, we examine potential modifiable factors impacting the timeliness of CTA reporting performed in stroke code activations.

Materials and methods: This is an observational study of stroke code CTA head and neck examinations performed at a single health system (3 emergency departments, 1550 inpatient beds) during 4 years (January 1, 2019, to December 31, 2023). Patient age, patient sex, care setting, time of year, shift type, trainee/attending radiologist characteristics, report factors, and number of CTAs performed within the preceding hour were considered potential factors impacting the turnaround time (TAT) of stroke code CTAs. Descriptive statistics, univariate regression, and multivariate regression were used to estimate the impact on reporting TAT.

Results: We performed 8422 stroke code CTA examinations. Median TAT was 29 minutes (interquartile range [IQR] 18-48). Median TAT by individual attending radiologists varied from 15 to 40 minutes (median of medians, 29 minutes [IQR 26-34.5]). Univariate regression analyses found younger patient age, emergency department setting, time later in the academic year, nonbusiness hours, specific individual radiologists/trainees, solo reporting by attending radiologists, use of preliminary reports, and fewer stroke codes within the preceding hour to all be associated with shorter TATs (all P < .05). After adjusting for patient-, logistical-, and radiologist-level factors in a multivariate regression model, the greatest impact on TAT was seen with variation in individual attending radiologists (adjusted coefficients, -11.9 to +29.4 minutes) and trainees (-40.1 to +95.7 minutes); reporting CTAs without a trainee and release of preliminary reports before final sign were associated with faster TATs (-19.9 and -26.9 minutes, respectively). Each stroke CTA within the preceding hour was associated with only a 2.8-minute increase in TAT. Secondary analyses suggested that previewing of cases during active scanning and use of "structured" reports correlate with a favorable impact on TAT among attending radiologists (both P < .05).

Conclusions: Radiologist and trainee-level timeliness in stroke CTA reporting varies widely. Interventions aimed at improving workflow efficiency for both trainees and attending radiologists could improve timeliness of reporting.

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