Abstract

The management of coronary disease epitomizes the call to better engage patients in shared medical decision-making. Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) is the foundation of diagnosis, risk stratification, and subsequent therapy; however, MPI reports are currently interpretable by specialists but not patients. To design and test a patient-centered report for stress MPI test results. This qualitative study of outpatients who underwent an MPI stress test and clinicians used a mixed methods approach. Phase 1 (December 2018 to July 2019) used qualitative methods to design a patient-centered reporting tool, with 5 focus groups with 36 patients and 2 focus groups with 27 clinicians. Phase 2 (June to September 2019) consisted of pilot testing the reporting tool with feedback from a structured survey given to patients who received MPI reports before and after implementing the tool. Key themes around patient experiences with the current MPI reporting and their desire for a more useful report were identified, which led to a sample reporting tool after serial iterations with feedback. Differences in patient knowledge and engagement were assessed between patients before and after implementation of the new reporting tool using χ2 tests. From patient focus groups (26 patients; mean [SD] age, 66.3 [9.6] years, 9 [35%] women), 3 themes on the inadequacies of current MPI reporting were identified: (1) inconsistent delivery of results, (2) use of medical jargon, and (3) unclear posttest course. We identified 5 themes for a more patient-centered MPI report: desire for written information, discussion of the report with medical personnel, presentation of results in simple language with use of visual graphics, comparisons with normal results, and personalized risk estimates. In a pilot survey with 123 patients split into a pre-implementation group (69 patients; mean [SD] age, 68.2 [8.5] years; 27 [51%] women) and a postimplementation group (54 patients; mean [SD] age, 66.4 [8.7] years; 30 [56%] women), the patient-centered report led to more patients reading the entire report (45 [83%] vs 46 [67%]; P = .04) and improved knowledge of future risk of cardiac events (41 [76%] vs 20 [29%]; P < .001). There was also a numerically higher percentage of patients who found the report easy to read (45 [83%] vs 44 [68%]; P = .05) and understand (42 [78%] vs 43 [66%]; P = .16), although these results were not statistically significant. This study identified key elements of a patient-centered report design for stress MPI test results, which improved patient engagement and knowledge. These preliminary data support further implementation and study of a more patient-centered MPI report.

Highlights

  • We identified 5 themes for a more patient-centered Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) report: desire for written information, discussion of the report with medical personnel, presentation of results in simple language with use of visual graphics, comparisons with normal results, and personalized risk estimates

  • Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) has a central role in diagnosis, risk stratification, and subsequent management for patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD), but the technical reports are geared toward referring specialists, not patients

  • While our study focused on stress MPI reporting, the key themes identified are potentially applicable to other imaging modalities

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Summary

Introduction

Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) has a central role in diagnosis, risk stratification, and subsequent management for patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD), but the technical reports are geared toward referring specialists, not patients. To improve the patient-centeredness of care, MPI reports should clearly communicate their findings to both clinicians and patients. The former group is important because referring clinicians with less knowledge about the specifics of the imaging study often order these studies and need to communicate the results to their patients. With the recent implementation of the 21st Century Cures Act,[1] patients have immediate access to their health records, including MPI reports, underscoring the importance of improving their interpretability for patients to a provide basic understanding of the results, prognosis, and potential posttest management strategies. We used a mixed methods approach to define key elements and design and pilot test a patient-centered MPI report

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