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Emergency departments see substantial increase in CT exams

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A new study reports that the use of CT in the nation’s emergency departments is growing exponentially. If the growth trend continues, by 2011, nearly 20% of all emergency department visits may involve a CT exam. The results of this study were presented Monday at the annual meeting of the RSNA.

A new study reports that the use of CT in the nation’s emergency departments is growing exponentially. If the growth trend continues, by 2011, nearly 20% of all emergency department visits may involve a CT exam. The results of this study were presented Monday at the annual meeting of the RSNA and published online and in the journal Radiology

“It is not surprising that CT utilization has increased,” said lead researcher David B. Larson, M.D., M.B.A., director of quality improvement in the radiology department at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Ohio. “What’s surprising is the sustained high rate of that growth. However, recent developments, such as increased awareness of cost, radiation concerns, national healthcare reform legislation, and the economic recession, are likely to inhibit further growth.”

Dr. Larson’s research team used data collected by the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey from 1995 through 2007 to identify nationwide trends associated with CT use in the ED. The researchers performed statistical analysis on a mean of 30,044 ED visits from each year over the 13-year period to estimate overall usage of CT in the ED.

“We have seen a remarkable growth in CT utilization, not only in the number of ED visits that involve CT imaging but in the percentage of patients walking into the ED who receive a CT,” Dr. Larson said.

According to the analysis, the number of ED visits that included a CT exam increased from 2.7 million in 1995 to 16.2 million in 2007, a 5.9-fold increase and an average growth rate of 16% per year. The percentage of ED visits involving a CT exam rose from 2.8% in 1995 to 13.9% in 2007.

“CT is a wonderful technique that is widely available,” Dr. Larson said. “Over the 13 years in our study, image resolution improved significantly, making CT a great tool to look for kidney stones, appendicitis, and coronary artery disease.”

For much of the 13-year period studied, headache was the complaint most commonly associated with a CT exam in the ED. But by 2007, headache was surpassed by abdominal pain as the complaint most often associated with CT imaging. In 2007, patients with abdominal pain represented 12.8% of all ED visits involving CT.

CT exams to investigate abdominal pain have a higher radiation dose than CT exams used to determine the cause of a headache. The study found that, overall, the use of CT for complaints typically related to exams with a higher radiation dose grew faster than those typically related to exams with a lower radiation dose. This suggests the radiation dose associated with CT in the ED may be growing at a faster rate than the growth in the overall use of CT.

In 1995, a patient visiting the ED with chest pain rarely received a CT exam. But by 2007, chest pain was the third most common complaint in the ED associated with CT imaging.

“Our emphasis now should be on carefully evaluating the use of CT in specific situations and making sure it is used appropriately,” Dr. Larson said.

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