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CT, MRI and other scans being increasingly used despite pressure to reduce their use, reports study
The rate of use of medical imaging such as computerized tomography (CT), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), and other scans has increased despite a broad campaign among physician groups to reduce the amount of imaging in medicine, reported a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
An increase in the use of CT, Magnetic Resonance Imaging and other scans have been reported in both the U.S. and Ontario, Canada. The study revealed that more than 135 million imaging exams conducted by researchers at UC Davis, UC San Francisco, and Kaiser Permanente. This concerns researchers because medical imaging is widely believed to be overused.
The study is the first of its size to determine imaging rates across different populations. It found that although the growth in imaging slowed in the early 2000s, it ticked back up in recent years for CT and Magnetic Resonance Imaging in most patient age groups. A notable exception was a decline in CT use in children in recent years.
Among the findings:
- Annual growth in CT, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, and ultrasound were highest in earlier years (2000-2006), but utilization has continued to rise year over year; between 2012 and 2016 there has been 1%-5% annual growth for most age groups and most tests in both the U.S. and Ontario.
- The one exception was CT use in children, which declined in the U.S. from 2009 -2013 and remained stable since 2013 and declined in Ontario since 2006.
- Rates of imaging with CT and Magnetic Resonance Imagingare higher in the U.S. than in Ontario, but that gap is closing. For example, among older adults in 2016, there were 51 MRIs per 1000 patients in the U.S. and 32 per 1000 patients in Ontario.
- Rates of imaging accelerated after initially dropping in many cases. For example, the rate of growth in CT scans among the elderly was 9.5 percent in 2000-2005, dropped to 0.9 percent in 2006-2011, but then increased to 3 percent annual growth over the last five years.
- Imaging rates for both adults and children were higher in the mixed model versus fully integrated healthcare systems, but the differences were modest.
CT scans use ionizing radiation to create images of the inside of the body, and they deliver a radiation dose far higher than a conventional X-ray, while MRIs use magnetic fields and radio waves to create images and do not expose patients to ionizing radiation. The authors noted that the study does not discuss whether the documented imaging use was appropriate or associated with better patient outcomes.
"Medical imaging is an important part of health care and contributes to accurate disease diagnosis and treatment, but it also can lead to patient harms such as incidental findings, overdiagnosis, anxiety, and radiation exposure that is associated with an increased risk of cancer," said lead author Rebecca Smith-Bindman, MD, a UCSF professor of radiology, epidemiology and biostatistics, and obstetrics and reproductive medicine.
Although it is widely believed that imaging rates are declining due to payment and educational efforts that have targeted unnecessary imaging, the authors found a reacceleration in imaging use, with the ongoing growth in the use of CT and Magnetic Resonance Imaging in adults.
"Like all aspects of medicine, it's important to make sure imaging is justified, and that the potential benefits are balanced against the potential harms," said Smith-Bindman, a member of the Philip R. Lee Institute of Health Policy Studies. "These potential harms of false-positive diagnoses and overdiagnoses can impact everyone who undergoes a test and thus need to be considered when imaging is used."
Diana Miglioretti, PhD, a biostatistics professor at UC Davis Department of Public Health Sciences and senior author on the study, said there were some hopeful signs among the findings.
"The good news is that rates of CT imaging are starting to come down in children," said Miglioretti, who is also a senior investigator with Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute. "However, they're still far lower in Ontario than in the U.S., suggesting there is additional room for improvement. It's also important to reduce unnecessary imaging in adults given they are also at risk of radiation-induced cancers."
The researchers analyzed patterns of medical imaging between 2000 and 2016 among a diverse group of 16-21 million adult and pediatric patients enrolled in seven U.S. health care systems and in the universal, publicly funded health care system in Ontario, Canada. For the U.S. data, they included people receiving care in both fully integrated health care systems such as Kaiser Permanente, and systems with mixed insurance including HMOs and PPOs with fee-for-service plans.
"Our capture of medical imaging utilization across seven U.S. health care systems and Ontario, Canada, over a 16-year period provides one of the most comprehensive assessments to date of imaging in children to older adults in North America," said Marilyn Kwan, PhD, co-author and senior research scientist in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research.
The authors note that potential overuse of diagnostic testing has been addressed with the "Choosing Wisely" campaign launched in 2012 by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation and endorsed by 85 professional medical societies. The effort urges physicians to talk with their patients about whether an imaging study is necessary, free from harm and supported by evidence. Other initiatives, including by the federal Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, have created incentives to discourage overuse of imaging by reducing reimbursement rates for certain scans.
The study authors say their findings suggest that neither the financial incentives nor the campaign to reduce the use of medical imaging have been entirely effective.
"Although most physicians are aware that imaging tests are frequently overused, there are not enough evidenced-based guidelines that rely on careful consideration of the evidence, including information on benefits and harms that can inform their testing decisions," Smith-Bindman said. "In the absence of balanced evidence, the default decision is to image."
For reference, click on the link
doi:10.1001/jama.2019.11456
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