Improving Quality of Chest Computed Tomography for Evaluation of Pediatric Malignancies

2019 
Introduction: Atelectasis is a problem in sedated pediatric patients undergoing cross-sectional imaging, impairing the ability to accurately interpret chest computed tomography (CT) imaging for the presence of malignancy, often leading to additional maneuvers and/or repeat imaging with additional radiation exposure. Methods: A quality improvement team established a best-practice protocol to improve the quality of thoracic CT imaging in young patients with suspected primary or metastatic pulmonary malignancy. The specific aim was to increase the percentage of chest CT scans obtained for the evaluation of pulmonary nodules with acceptable atelectasis scores (0-1) in patients aged 0-5 years with malignancy, from a baseline of 45% to a goal of 75%. Results: A retrospective cohort consisted of 94 patients undergoing chest CT between February 2014 and January 2015 before protocol implementation. The prospective cohort included 195 patients imaged between February 2015 and April 2018. The baseline percentage of CT scans that were scored 0 or 1 on the atelectasis scale was 44.7%, which improved to 75% with protocol implementation. The mean atelectasis score improved from 1.79 (±0.14) to 0.7 (±0.09). Sedation incidence decreased substantially from 73.2% to 26.5% during the study period. Conclusions: Using quality improvement methodology including standardization of care, the percentage of children with atelectasis scores of 0-1 undergoing cross-sectional thoracic imaging improved from 45% to 75%. Also, eliminating the need for sedation in these patients has further improved image quality, potentially allowing for optimal detection of smaller nodules, and minimizing morbidity.
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