Radiologists perform most diagnostic and minimally invasive interventional musculoskeletal studies in the U.S., with some areas experiencing continuous growth. Data released last Wednesday at the RSNA meeting, however, suggest future turf battles between radiologists and surgeons are lurking on the horizon.
Radiologists perform most diagnostic and minimally invasive interventional musculoskeletal studies in the U.S., with some areas experiencing continuous growth. Data released last Wednesday at the RSNA meeting, however, suggest future turf battles between radiologists and surgeons are lurking on the horizon.
Dr. David C. Levin, a professor of radiology at Thomas Jefferson University, presented data comparing MSK imaging workloads for radiologists and orthopedic surgeons between 2000 and 2004. Levin and colleagues reviewed Medicare Part B data on four MSK imaging categories: plain radiography; bone densitometry, MRI, and CT.
They rated the relative value units (RVUs) for each specialty's CPT codes per 1000 Medicare beneficiaries and found that radiologists performed more than two-thirds of the overall MSK imaging studies during the five-year period. The data showed that radiologists' MSK imaging volumes grew more rapidly than those for orthopedic surgeons, who perform predominantly x-rays and densitometry reads.
The RVU rate for MRI studies allocated to orthopedic surgeons was only 5% of the radiologists' share, but the data showed this rate rising rapidly.
"The trend in MSK MR use by orthopedic surgeons may bear further watching," Levin said.
In another presentation, Dr. William Morrison, an associate professor of radiology at TJU, released a comparative study of data on biopsy procedures from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Morrison and colleagues reviewed all claims entered between 1996 and 2003 to determine which specialties performed most MSK biopsies.
They found that, with the exception of marrow aspiration, radiologists performed most percutaneous bone biopsies. The overall rate of bone biopsies performed by radiologists during this period increased slowly but steadily. The investigators also found, however, that the rate of bone biopsies performed by surgeons - particularly orthopedic and neurosurgeons - is rapidly increasing.
For more online information, visit Diagnostic Imaging's RSNA Webcast.
Enhancing Lesions on Breast MRI: Can an Updated Kaiser Scoring Model Improve Detection?
September 26th 2024The addition of parameters such as patient age, MIP sign and associated imaging features to the Kaiser score demonstrated a 95.6 percent AUC for breast cancer detection of enhancing lesions on breast MRI in recently published research.
MRI or Ultrasound for Evaluating Pelvic Endometriosis?: Seven Takeaways from a New Literature Review
September 13th 2024While noting the strength of MRI for complete staging of disease and ultrasound’s ability to provide local disease characterization, the authors of a new literature review suggest the two modalities offer comparable results for diagnosing pelvic endometriosis.
New Meta-Analysis Examines MRI Assessment for Treatment of Esophageal Cancer
September 12th 2024Diffusion-weighted MRI provided pooled sensitivity and specificity rates of 82 percent and 81 percent respectively for gauging patient response to concurrent chemoradiotherapy for esophageal cancer, according to new meta-analysis.