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Increasing use of computed tomography scans in the North Denmark Region raises patient safety concern

Use of computed tomography (CT) scans raises safety concern as lifetime cumulative ionising radiation exposure is associated with risk of developing malignancies. This study aimed to investigate use of abdominal CT scans in the Danish health care sector. Data on abdominal CT scans performed annually...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of radiology 2023-09, Vol.166, p.110997-110997, Article 110997
Main Authors: Westmark, Signe, Hessellund, Thomas, Hoffmann, Andreas, Borggaard Madsen, Bjarne, Jensen, Trine S., Gielen, Mahican, Bøggild, Henrik, Derek Christian Leutscher, Peter
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Use of computed tomography (CT) scans raises safety concern as lifetime cumulative ionising radiation exposure is associated with risk of developing malignancies. This study aimed to investigate use of abdominal CT scans in the Danish health care sector. Data on abdominal CT scans performed annually in the North Denmark Region between 2005 and 2018 were extracted from the regional registry with emphasis on patients with a medical history of a repeated abdominal CT scan within 28 days. An audit of the medical files was subsequently conducted in 100 randomly selected patient cases to evaluate clinical information being provided, in addition to justification for a repeated abdominal CT scan, and finally if other radiology modalities could have been applied. Number of annually performed abdominal CT scans in this demographically stable regional population increased by a factor 4.3 from 15 in 2005 to 65 in 2018 per 1,000 inhabitants. The audit revealed that 31% of the secondabdominal CT scans within a 28 days period were categorized as either doubtful whether justified or not justified. Moreover, 20% of theCT scans were considered replaceable by ultrasonography. Annual performance of abdominal CT scans increased fourfold during the 14 years period. This tendency is probably attributable to changes in the Danish health care sector by which CT scan examination are used more frequently aiming at more accelerated patient investigation flow in conjunction with shorter length of hospitalization stay. Alertness is strongly warranted towards the associated risk of cancer due to life-time cumulative ionising radiation exposure by this strategy.
ISSN:0720-048X
1872-7727
DOI:10.1016/j.ejrad.2023.110997