| Literature DB >> 17117181 |
V Patkar1, C Hurt, R Steele, S Love, A Purushotham, M Williams, R Thomson, J Fox.
Abstract
Widespread health service goals to improve consistency and safety in patient care have prompted considerable investment in the development of evidence-based clinical guidelines. Computerised decision support (CDS) systems have been proposed as a means to implement guidelines in practice. This paper discusses the general concept in oncology and presents an evaluation of a CDS system to support triple assessment (TA) in breast cancer care. Balanced-block crossover experiment and questionnaire study. One stop clinic for symptomatic breast patients. Twenty-four practising breast clinicians from United Kingdom National Health Service hospitals. A web-based CDS system. Clinicians made significantly more deviations from guideline recommendations without decision support (60 out of 120 errors without CDS; 16 out of 120 errors with CDS, P < 0.001). Ignoring minor deviations, 16 potentially critical errors arose in the no-decision-support arm of the trial compared with just one (P = 0.001) when decision support was available. Opinions of participating clinicians towards the CDS tool became more positive after they had used it (P < 0.025). The use of decision support capabilities in TA may yield significant measurable benefits for quality and safety of patient care. This is an important option for improving compliance with evidence-based practice guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17117181 PMCID: PMC2360742 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Tallis representation of TA workflow showing the main plan. The decision nodes represented by circles are embedded at various points in the workflow.
Guidelines used in the DSS
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| Genetic risk assessment | NICE: Familial breast cancer guideline | 88 |
| Diagnosis | SIGN: Management of breast cancer in women | 82 |
| BASO: Guidelines for surgeons in the management of symptomatic breast disease in the UK | 69 | |
| NCCN: Breast Cancer Screening and Diagnosis guidelines | 75 | |
| Imaging | ACR: Appropriateness Criteria | 70 |
| NHSBSP guidelines: Breast cancer screening assessment (Pub. 49) | 63 | |
| Pathology | NHSBSP guidelines: Non-operative diagnostic procedures and reporting in breast cancer screening (Pub. 50) | 63 |
DSS=Decision Support System.
The table includes overall AGREE score for each clinical practice guideline out of a maximum score of 92.
Figure 2TADS screen with decision support enabled, showing decision options for the imaging for one case, to be taken after medical history and examination. The system recommends an ultrasound scan but recommends against mammography and against doing nothing. For the decision option ‘Do a mammogram of both breasts’, arguments for and against have been expanded to show the justifying evidence (an option available to the clinician for all decisions, options and arguments). Links are provided to the relevant supporting literature, which can be accessed by the user if required (e.g. from PubMed).
Figure 3TADS screen with decision support disabled, showing options for imaging after medical history and examination have been presented.
Analysis of deviations in decision support and no-decision support arms
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| All deviations | 60 | 60 | 16 | 104 | <0.001 |
| Potentially critical deviations | 16 | 104 | 1 | 119 | <0.001 |
| Potentially critical irretrievable deviations | 10 | 110 | 1 | 119 | 0.01 |
Responses to the statement: ‘patient care in triple assessment would benefit from computerised decision support’
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| Strongly agree | 3 | 3 |
| Agree | 3 | 13 |
| Undecided | 16 | 6 |
| Disagree | 1 | 2 |
| Strongly disagree | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 24 | 24 |
TADS=The Triple Assessment Decision Support System.
Ten clinicians maintained the same opinion of TADS before and after; 11 became more convinced of its benefit; two became one category less convinced of its benefit.