학술논문
Comparison of the Effectiveness of Single-Component and Multicomponent Interventions for Reducing Radiation Doses in Patients Undergoing Computed Tomography: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
Document Type
article
Author
Smith-Bindman, Rebecca; Chu, Philip; Wang, Yifei; Chung, Robert; Lopez-Solano, Naomi; Einstein, Andrew J; Solberg, Leif; Cervantes, Luisa F; Yellen-Nelson, Thomas; Boswell, William; Delman, Bradley N; Duong, Phuong-Anh; Goode, Allen R; Kasraie, Nima; Lee, Ryan K; Neill, Rebecca; Pahwa, Anokh; Pike, Pavlina; Roehm, Jodi; Schindera, Sebastian; Starkey, Jay; Suntharalingam, Saravanabavaan; Jeukens, Cécile RLPN; Miglioretti, Diana L
Source
JAMA internal medicine. 180(5)
Subject
Language
Abstract
ImportanceComputed tomography (CT) radiation doses vary across institutions and are often higher than needed.ObjectiveTo assess the effectiveness of 2 interventions to reduce radiation doses in patients undergoing CT.Design, setting, and participantsThis randomized clinical trial included 864 080 adults older than 18 years who underwent CT of the abdomen, chest, combined abdomen and chest, or head at 100 facilities in 6 countries from November 1, 2015, to September 21, 2017. Data analysis was performed from October 4, 2017, to December 14, 2018.InterventionsImaging facilities received audit feedback alone comparing radiation-dose metrics with those of other facilities followed by the multicomponent intervention, including audit feedback with targeted suggestions, a 7-week quality improvement collaborative, and best-practice sharing. Facilities were randomly allocated to the time crossing from usual care to the intervention.Main outcomes and measuresPrimary outcomes were the proportion of high-dose CT scans and mean effective dose at the facility level. Secondary outcomes were organ doses. Outcomes after interventions were compared with those before interventions using hierarchical generalized linear models adjusting for temporal trends and patient characteristics.ResultsAcross 100 facilities, 864 080 adults underwent 1 156 657 CT scans. The multicomponent intervention significantly reduced proportions of high-dose CT scans, measured using effective dose. Absolute changes in proportions of high-dose scans were 1.1% to 7.9%, with percentage reductions in the proportion of high-dose scans of 4% to 30% (abdomen: odds ratio [OR], 0.82; 95% CI, 0.77-0.88; P