Abstract

Imaging before specialist evaluation of abnormal head shape is associated with a delay in evaluation and an increase in radiation exposure. A retrospective cohort study was performed to identify referral patterns before and after the implementation of a low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) protocol and physician education to examine the intervention's impact on time to evaluation and radiation exposure. Six hundred sixty-nine patients with an abnormal head shape diagnosis at a single academic medical center between July 1, 2014 and December 1, 2019 were reviewed. Demographics, referral information, diagnostic testing, diagnoses, and timeline of clinical evaluation were recorded. Before and after the LDCT and physician education intervention, the average ages at initial specialist appointments were 8.82 and 7.75 months, respectively ( P = 0.125). Children referred after our intervention were less likely to have prereferral imaging than children referred prior (odds ratio: 0.59, CI: 0.39-0.91, P = 0.015). Average radiation exposure per patient before referral decreased from 14.66 mGy to 8.17 mGy ( P = 0.021). Prereferral imaging, referral by a non-pediatrician, and non-Caucasian race were associated with older age at the initial specialist appointment. Widespread craniofacial center adoption of an LDCT protocol and improved clinician knowledge may lead to a reduction in late referrals and radiation exposure in pediatric patients with an abnormal head shape diagnosis.

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