1. Nonradiologists as second readers for intraluminal findings at CT colonography1
- Author
-
Mark Percival, Kale D. Bodily, Jeff L. Fidler, Trudy A. Engelby, Aaron J. Krych, Jared A. Christensen, Brett M. Young, Joel G. Fletcher, Drew Rodysill, C. Daniel Johnson, and Douglas C. Vander Kooi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Colonography ,business.industry ,education ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Teaching file ,business ,Surgery - Abstract
Rationale and objectives Multiple trials have documented wide interobserver variability between radiologists interpreting computed tomography colonography (CTC) exams. We sought to determine if nonradiologists could learn to interpret intraluminal findings at CTC with a high degree of sensitivity to determine if they could play a role as second readers in interpreting CTC exams. Materials and methods Seven nonradiologists (five medical students, two radiologic technologists) undertook self-directed CTC training using a teaching file of 50 cases; thereafter, each reader blindly interpreted 50 cases with colonoscopic correlation (30 positive, 20 negative). Results were compared with a previously studied cohort of radiologists. The two technologists additionally repeated the exam after 6 weeks of clinical experience. Results The sensitivity of nonradiologists for small (5–9 mm) polyps, large (>9 mm) lesions, and cancers was similar to that of radiologists (0.45 versus 0.63, 0.74 versus 0.71, and 0.80 versus 0.88, respectively). After 6 weeks of clinical experience as second readers, the accuracy of one technologist significantly improved (from 74% to 90%, P = .008), whereas accuracy of the other tended toward improvement (from 74% to 86%%, P = .25). Nonradiologists detected, on average, 6/36 additional polyps (17%) missed by any radiologist, and the sensitivity of 5/7 nonradiologists was significantly greater than at least one of the radiologists (P = .05). Conclusion Nonradiologists can perform similarly to radiologists in interpreting intraluminal findings at CTC, with nonradiologist performance improving even after experience with more than 100 cases. Skilled nonradiologists may play a vital role as a second reader of intraluminal findings or by performing quality control of examinations before patient dismissal.
- Published
- 2005