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Longitudinal changes in the US emergency department use of advanced neuroimaging in the mechanical thrombectomy era.

Mamer LE, Kocher KE, Cranford JA, Scott PA. Longitudinal changes in the US emergency department use of advanced neuroimaging in the mechanical thrombectomy era. Emergency Radiology. 2024 Oct 1; 31(5):695-703.

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Abstract:

PURPOSE: To describe ED neuroimaging trends across the time-period spanning the early adoption of endovascular therapy for acute stroke (2013-2018). MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed a retrospective, cross-sectional study of ED visits using the 2013-2018 National Emergency Department Sample, a 20% sample of ED encounters in the United States. Neuroimaging use was determined by Common Procedural Terminology (CPT) code for non-contrast head CT (NCCT), CT angiography head (CTA), CT perfusion (CTP), and MRI brain (MRI) in non-admitted ED patients. Data was analyzed according to sampling weights and imaging rates were calculated per 100,000 ED visits. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify hospital-level factors associated with imaging utilization. RESULTS: Study population comprised 571,935,906 weighted adult ED encounters. Image utilization increased between 2013 and 2018 for all modalities studied, although more pronounced in CTA (80.24/100,000 ED visits to 448.26/100,000 ED visits (p? < 0.001)) and CTP (1.75/100,000 ED visits to 28.04/100,000 ED visits p? < 0.001)). Regression analysis revealed that teaching hospitals were associated with higher odds of high CTA utilization (OR 1.88 for 2018, p? < 0.05), while low-volume EDs and public hospitals showed the reverse (OR 0.39 in 2018, p? < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: We identified substantial increases in overall neuroimaging use in a national sample of non-admitted emergency department encounters between 2013 and 2018 with variability in utilization according to both patient and hospital properties. Further investigation into the appropriateness of this imaging is required to ensure that access to acute stroke treatment is balanced against the timing and cost of over-imaging.





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