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Fracture Detection: A Possible Method to Aid in Diagnosis and Improve Reporting Accuracy.
Authors: Joseph A. Gagliardi, M.D.
(1), Stacey M Nunberg, M.D. (2) Thomas Fisher, M.D. (1)
April 03, 2001

  1. St. Vincents Medical Center, Bridgeport, CT
  2. Long Island Jewish Medical Center, New Hyde Park, NY

Background: Providing accurate and immediate interpretations of the radiological studies performed in the emergency department (ED) is a challenge for many radiology residency programs. Although the radiology resident’s preliminary reports are reviewed periodically by attending radiologists, they are often the only review available while the patient is being evaluated and treated at the hospital.

During a quality improvement review at Saint Vincent's Medical Center (SVMC), the question of unacceptable rates of missed fractures and/or misleading preliminary reports in the ED was raised. A review of the preliminary reports with missed fractures found that the majority of missed/misleading diagnoses were due to radiology residents’ misinterpretations. A committee of Emergency Department attendings, support staff, radiology attendings, residents, and technicians met to address this issue. Possible contributing factors were identified and solutions were suggested. In particular, the radiology residents felt that the clinical histories provided on the requisitions were often inadequate; they suggested that this served as a major causative factor in missed/misleading diagnoses .

A quality-of-care audit published by radiology staff members from the Massachusetts General Hospital reached a similar conclusion: there was an increase in the number of significant misreadings of radiographs in the ED when the clinical history provided was inadequate (1). This study divided the errors into three levels of significance:

  • high (having an important effect on patient care),
  • moderate (probably having an effect on patient care), and
  • low (having little effect on patient care).

Among all ED cases reviewed in this study, errors graded as "high" increased from 20% to 27%, and errors graded as "moderate" increased from 29% to 40%, when the histories provided were inadequate. Furthermore, when a continuous quality improvement intervention plan was implemented at Louisiana State University Medical Center that mandated inclusion of pertinent histories on all radiograph request forms, patient recall for misread radiographs decreased by 42.9% (2).

Objective:

This study was designed to review the adequacy of the clinical history for radiographic interpretations done by residents and emergency department attending physicians. We also assessed the use of markers to improve the accuracy of preliminary interpretations of skeletal radiographs in the four anatomical areas that were most frequently imaged for fracture detection (hand, wrist, foot, and ankle).

Methods:

We reviewed 114 consecutive request forms from the four most frequently encountered anatomical areas with suspected fractures. These four areas accounted for approximately 67% of all musculoskeletal radiographic exams performed in our ED over a three month period. Each history was evaluated by the first author to determine if they were adequate. The percentage of fractures missed in the ED by residents or EPs was also assessed. At the first author’s institution, all ED radiographs are initially interpreted by radiology residents from 8:00 a.m. until 11:00 p.m. After 11:00 p.m., the emergency department attending physician interprets the radiographs.

In an attempt to lower our missed fracture rate in the four "high frequency" imaging areas and further evaluate the impact of clinical history on the detection of fractures, an additional 277 consecutive patients were asked to place a small 1.5 millimeter (mm) radio-opaque X-spot marker (The Beekley Skin Marking System) over the site of maximal tenderness. The hypothesis was that these markers would allow one to focus on the site of maximal pain, thus increasing fracture detection regardless of the histories provided.

After the marker intervention, preliminary interpretations of skeletal radiographs performed in the ED were compared to the final interpretation by a staff attending radiologist. In the case of a discrepancy, two attending radiologists had to concur on the final diagnosis. Patients were excluded if they had casts in place, fracture or dislocation reduction studies without new trauma, or inadequate radiographs due to patient positioning or filming techniques.

Results:

The first author reviewed the clinical history data on the 114 unmarked patients. Twenty-eight patients had acceptable histories while 86 patients had unacceptable histories. Unacceptable histories failed to target the site of maximum tenderness and neglected to include reports of potentially contributory diseases. Examples of unacceptable histories included words or phrases such as "pain", "rule out fracture", "motor vehicle accident", and "trauma."

The accuracy of the preliminary readings of emergency skeletal radiographs before and after marker intervention are shown in Table 1. Prior to marker intervention, the efforts of the emergency department physicians and radiology residents produced a 4.3 % false negative rate (fractures missed were confirmed when the radiographs were interpreted by a board certified staff radiologist, usually on the following morning). Fractures missed in the first reading often occurred in uncommon areas or had little displacement (Fig 1 and Fig 2).

A study from the University of Iowa reviewed ankle radiographs from 433 patients and reported that fractures were missed in 4.2% of cases (3). This result is almost identical to the total false negative rate for all four areas monitored in our evaluation.

The false negative rate for fracture detection after the use of markers was 3.2 %. This included 4 missed fractures out of a total of 97 radiographic studies of the hand (4.1% false negative rate), 3 missed fractures out of a total of 72 radiographic studies of the ankle (4.2% false negative rate) and 2 missed fractures out of a total of 39 radiographic studies of the wrist (5.1% false negative rate). No fractures were missed out of a total of 69 radiographic studies of the foot.

One significant finding, not reflected in the data presented, was that 25% of patients needed to place more than one marker on the anatomical region radiographed. Markers were often placed at distant sites (Fig 3 and Fig 4), thus focusing attention to multiple areas. This underscores the need to do a thorough examination of the radiographs even after a fracture is identified, and the potential value of attention to patient report as part of a useful history.

There were several cases in this study (Fig 5a/b, Fig 6 and Fig 7) in which marker placement helped to avoid misleading conclusions about the presence or absence of acute findings in patients with previous trauma. Therefore, the placement of the markers considerably reduced our false positive rate to 0.7% as compared to 2.6% when no markers were present. In addition, there were instances in which the markers helped detect subtle fractures (Fig 8, Fig 9 and Fig 10a/b).

There was a wide spectrum for missed fractures; some were quite obvious and correctly located by the patient's markings (Fig. 11), while others were extremely subtle on routine radiographs and had to be confirmed on MRI (Fig 12 a/b). There were no instances in this study where the placement of a marker obscured a significant finding. At no time were additional views needed because of the location of the markers.

Discussion:

The ability to attend to detail and focus on all structures radiographed is critical for imaging studies. We have found that clinicians, in an ED setting, for whatever reasons, may neglect to provide an adequate targeted history for radiographic extremity studies when a fracture is suspected.

An experienced, board certified radiologist should detect almost all fractures of the bones and joints studied, and our data support this notion. There were no instances, during this monitoring period, in which one of the staff radiologists misdiagnosed a fracture. The question was, how could we improve our resident’s and EP’s performance?

The placement of a marker is a cheap and simple method to help the resident or attending focus on the areas of maximal pain for the patient. At our institution, the Beekley 1.5mm X-spots come in boxes that contain 150 X-spots at a cost of approximately $60.00 per box. This equates to an additional cost of approximately 40 cents per case. It is our belief that marker use is not associated with loss of underlying findings and enables a more accurate report to be generated.

Although the literature supports the theory that adequate histories are essential for fracture detection, the reality is that a complete history may not be available at the time of review. Some type of compromise, therefore, needs to be reached. We believe that short histories, targeting a specific area, should be mandatory for all radiographic study requests. Historical information, typically provided by the emergency physician, often does not help localize the area in question. More useful data would include, not only location of maximal tenderness, but also a history of underlying disease such as cancer or metabolic bone disease. It would seem that a targeted history combined with the feedback offered by a marking system, should improve fracture detection in the ED setting.

We invite any comments from our readers regarding different methods to improve the accuracy rates for reading ED radiographs. Send correspondence to editor@radiologyweb.com.

References and Selected Readings:

  1. Rhea JT, Potsaid MS, DeLuca SA. Errors of Interpretation as Elicted by a Quality Audit of an Emergency Radiology Facility. Radiology 1979; 132:277-80.
  2. Preston CA, Marr JJ, Amaraneni KK, Suthar BS. Reduction of "Callbacks" to the ED Due to Discrepancies in Plain Radiograph Interpretation. Am J Emerg Med 1998; 16:160-
  3. Brandser EA, Braksiek RJ, El-Khoury GY, Saltzman CL, Marsh JL, Clark WA, Prokuski LJ. Missed Fractures on Emergency Room Ankle Radiographs: An Analysis of 433 Patients. Emergency Radiology 1997; 4:295-302.
  4. Berlin L. Is a Radiologic Miss Medical Malpractice? An Ominous Example. In: Malpractice Issues in Radiology. Leesburg Va.: American Roentgen Ray Society, 1998; 43-46.
 
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