January 16, 2017 --
Shoulder ultrasound findings frequently have a significant effect on management
and clinician decision-making in patients being treated for shoulder pain,
according to research from the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology (MIR) in St.
Louis.
After retrospectively
evaluating the impact of more than 900 shoulder ultrasound exams on patient
management, the Mallinckrodt researchers found that nearly two-thirds of
patients received a change in their treatment plan based on the ultrasound
findings. What's more, shoulder ultrasound had a statistically significant
effect on the invasiveness of the patient treatment.
Dr. Michael
Friedman shared the MIR research during a session at RSNA 2016 in Chicago.
A common complaint
Shoulder pain is the
third most common presenting musculoskeletal complaint after knee and low-back
pain, affecting 16% to 26% of the population. It's a difficult clinical
assessment, however, due to the overlap of many common shoulder pathologies,
Friedman said.
Rotator cuff pathology
is one of the most common causes of shoulder pain, for which MRI has been the
gold standard. There's been a tremendous increase in the use of musculoskeletal
ultrasound over the past five to 10 years, however. This growth is supported by
research, such as a study that found 84% sensitivity and 89% specificity for
partial-thickness tears and 96% sensitivity and 93% specificity for
full-thickness tears, he said. MSK ultrasound also has been shown to have good
correlation with MRI for rotator cuff muscular atrophy.
The Society of
Radiologists in Ultrasound has published a consensus statement of recommended
imaging algorithms for referring physicians on how to assess shoulder pain.
Questions remain, however, about the actual diagnostic impact of
musculoskeletal ultrasound on current orthopedic clinical evaluation of these
patients.
As a result, the
Mallinckrodt researchers set out to explore the effect of musculoskeletal
ultrasound of the shoulder on clinical decision-making at their institution. A
search of their RIS database found 1,037 consecutive shoulder ultrasound
studies over a 12-month period, ordered by 15 orthopedic faculty members and
interpreted by 10 radiologists. After 102 exams were excluded due to missing
pre- and postultrasound clinical notes or because they were ordered for
contralateral comparisons, the researchers were left with 935 patient exams for
their study.
Three musculoskeletal
radiologists then analyzed the electronic medical record and clinic notes and
recorded the pre- and postultrasound treatment plans. Patients were classified
into treatment plan categories, including conservative management/physical
therapy (PT), therapeutic injection, or surgical intervention. Many patients
were frequently prescribed conservative management/physical therapy and
therapeutic injection together, which was also analyzed as a distinct
management plan.
Conservative
management/PT was considered to be noninvasive management, while therapeutic
injection and surgical intervention were deemed to be invasive management.
Treatment changes
After receiving an
ultrasound scan, 63.2% of patients had their treatment plans changed.
Patient management plans before and after MSK
ultrasound
|
||
Preultrasound treatment plan
|
No. of patients
|
Overall change in management plan following MSK
ultrasound
|
Conservative
management/PT
|
744/935 (79.6%)
|
490/744 (65.9%)
|
Invasive
management (injection or scheduled for surgery)
|
191/935 (20.4%)
|
101/191 (52.9%)
|
Of the 744 patients
with an initial conservative management/PT treatment plan, 423 (56.9%) were
shifted to a more invasive treatment plan based on the shoulder ultrasound
exam. In patients set to receive an invasive management plan, 46 (24.1%) were
changed to a noninvasive treatment plan.
The impact of shoulder
ultrasound on the invasiveness of patient management was statistically significant
(p < 0.001).
The researchers
acknowledged the limitations of their study, including its reliance on the
quality of physician documentation. The team did not make any assumptions about
treatment intent and placed patients in treatment categories solely based on
the impression in the clinical notes.
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