Abstract
IntroductionCost and radiation risk have prompted intense examination of trauma patient imaging. A proposed decision instrument (DI) for the use of chest computed tomography (CT), (CCT) in blunt trauma patients includes thoracic spine (TS) tenderness, altered mental status (AMS) and distracting painful injury (DPI) as potential predictor variables. TS CT is a separate, costly study whose value is currently ill-defined. The objective of this study is to determine test characteristics of these predictor variables alone, and in combination, to derive a TS injury DI.MethodsProspective cohort study of blunt trauma patients age > 14 in a Level I Trauma Center who had either CCT or TS CT.ResultsOf 1,798 blunt trauma patients, 1,174 (65.3%) had CCT, and 46 (2.6%) had a TS CT at physician discretion. CCT identified 58 TS injuries in 1,220 patients (4.8%). For 1,032 patients without AMS, 18/35 had TS tenderness, for sensitivity of 51.4%, specificity 84.7%, positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) of 10.5% and 98.0%. Positive likelihood ratio (+LR) was 3.35, with negative (−LR) 0.57. Among the 58 TS injuries, 23 had AMS for sensitivity of 39.7%, with other test characteristics of 85.8%, 12.2%, 96.6%, with +LR 2.79 and −LR 0.70. Thirty-eight of 58 had DPI, for sensitivity 65.5%, with other test characteristics 65.7%, 8.7%, and 97.4%, with +LR 1.91 and −LR 0.52. Combining 3 predictor variables into a proposed DI found 56/58 injuries for test characteristics of 96.6% (95% CI 88.1–99.6%), 49.1% (46.1–52.0%), 8.6% (6.6–11.1%) and 99.7% (CI 98.7–100%), with +LR 1.90 (1.76–2.04) and −LR 0.07 (0.02–0.28). If validated, the DI would exclude 572/1,220 CCT patients from separate TS CT (46.9%, CI 44.1–49.7%), and 141/511 (27.6%, CI 23.8–31.7%) patients who actually had TS CT in our cohort. Medicare payment at our center for sagittal reconstructions of TS CT is $280 for professional plus technical charges ($3,312 per study). The DI, if validated, would save $39,000–$160,000 in TS imaging payments.ConclusionTS CT is low yield and costly. Patients who are alert, have no TS tenderness and no DPI have a very low likelihood of TS injury (NPV 99.7% 95% CI lower limit 98.7%) with –LR=0.07, 95% CI upper limit 0.28). Avoiding TS CT may save considerable charges and payments.
Highlights
Cost and radiation risk have prompted intense examination of trauma patient imaging
Combining 3 predictor variables into a proposed decision instrument (DI) found 56/58 injuries for test characteristics of 96.6%, 49.1% (46.1-52.0%), 8.6% (6.6-11.1%) and 99.7% (CI 98.7-100%), with +LR 1.90 (1.76-2.04) and -LR 0.07 (0.02-0.28)
Increased focus on cost-effective trauma evaluation has driven the development of clinical decision rules for high volume and high risk injuries, including cervical spine,[1,2] blunt head,[3] and chest[4,5] trauma, as well as high volume extremity injury.[6,7]
Summary
A proposed decision instrument (DI) for the use of chest computed tomography (CT), (CCT) in blunt trauma patients includes thoracic spine (TS) tenderness, altered mental status (AMS) and distracting painful injury (DPI) as potential predictor variables. Increased focus on cost-effective trauma evaluation has driven the development of clinical decision rules for high volume and high risk injuries, including cervical spine,[1,2] blunt head,[3] and chest[4,5] trauma, as well as high volume extremity injury.[6,7] Chest computed tomography (CCT) evaluation for blunt trauma varies widely. Twenty percent of patients with 1 spinal column injury are found to have a second, non-contiguous fracture, and these are associated with high velocity mechanisms.[8] it would be prudent to develop a decision instrument (DI) to identify all TS fractures, while not increasing cost with dedicated sagittal reconstructions of the TS from CCT. A DI would need to include other predictive factors to capture the vast majority of injuries.[9]
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