• J Intensive Care Med · Jul 2010

    Review of a large clinical series: the value of routinely obtained chest radiographs on admission to a mixed medical--surgical intensive care unit.

    • Liesbeth Martine Kager, Anke Kröner, Jan M Binnekade, Jan-Willem Gratama, Peter E Spronk, Jaap Stoker, Margreeth B Vroom, and Marcus J Schultz.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands. l.m.kager@amc.uva.nl
    • J Intensive Care Med. 2010 Jul 1; 25 (4): 227-32.

    Background And ObjectivesThe efficacy of routinely obtained chest radiographs (CXRs) on admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) is largely unknown. The current study investigated the efficacy of routinely obtained admission CXRs and determined whether the value of this diagnostic test was dependent on patient category.Materials And MethodsProspective nonrandomized controlled study. including 1081 admission CXRs of 1330 patients admitted to a 28-bed mixed medical-surgical university-affiliated ICU, over a 10-month period. To determine the value of admission CXRs, 2 categories of efficacy were used: diagnostic efficacy (the number of CXRs with a new or progressive major finding divided by the total number of CXRs) and therapeutic efficacy (the number of CXRs resulting in a change in clinical management divided by the total number of CXRs). Efficacy <15% was considered low. Patients were subclassified into subcategories on the basis of type of admission.ResultsOf all admission CXRs, 227 were clinically indicated and 854 were routinely obtained to establish a baseline prior to admission to ICU. Diagnostic efficacy of routinely obtained admission CXRs was 11%. The majority of abnormalities were malposition of invasive devices and severe pulmonary congestion. Therapeutic efficacy of routinely obtained admission CXRs was only 5%. Subgroup analysis showed highest efficacy in nonsurgical patients.ConclusionsIn our mixed medical-surgical ICU the diagnostic and therapeutic efficacy of routinely obtained admission CXRs is low, though not completely negligible. Highest efficacy of CXRs was found in nonsurgical patients. Prospective studies are needed to determine whether abolishing this diagnostic test is a safe strategy.

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