From the Departments of Radiology and Epidemiology, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences and Heath Services, Isfahan, Iran , janghorbani@yahoo.com
Abstract: (4697 Views)
Errors and variations in interpretation can happen in clinical imaging. Few
studies have examined the biased effect of clinical information on reporting of
brain CT scans. In a blinded double crossover design, we studied whether three
radiologists were biased by clinical information when making CT scan diagnosis
of the brain. Three consultant radiologists in three rounds with at least a one-month
interval assessed 100 consecutive cases of brain CT scan. In the first round,
clinical information was not available and 100 films without clinical information
were given to radiologists. In the second round, the same 100 films were given
and true clinical information was available. In the third round, the same 100 films
were given and false clinical information was allocated. In 180 cases (60%) the
evaluation resulted in the same diagnosis on all three occasions (95% confidence
interval (CI): 54.5,65.5), whereas 120 (400/0 95% CI: 34.5,45.5) sets were evaluated
differently. 48 cases (16% 95% CI: 11.9, 20.1) had discordant evaluation
with true and 33 (11 % 950/0 CI: 7.5,14.5) with false clinical information. Discordance
without and with true and false clinical information was 39 (13% 95% CI:
9.2, 16.8). Correct clinical information improves the brain CT report, while the
report became less accurate after false clinical information was allocated. These
results indicate that radiologists are biased by clinical information when reporting
brain CT scans.
Type of Study:
Original Research |
Subject:
Radiology