| Literature DB >> 20565845 |
Greet Yvonne Agnes De Vlieger1, Elien Marie Jeanne Lia Mahieu, Wouter Meersseman.
Abstract
The availability of advanced diagnostic tools has grown in the past decades. Hence, a growing false belief exists that everything is known about the patient before death. Moreover, intensivists may wrongly believe that autopsy findings do not contribute to the understanding of pathophysiological events. The immediate result is that few ICUs nowadays assemble enough autopsy cases with new and interesting clinicopathological features. However, we believe that, at least in tertiary ICUs, autopsies remain a valuable examination, as a tool for quality control, as a way of establishing gold standards for diagnostic examinations and as an aid in developing guidelines for treatment and diagnosis of diseases frequently encountered in the ICU. Finally, due to the ever-expanding armamentarium of immunosuppressive agents, a growing list of opportunistic infections is discovered during autopsy. The present article gives an overview of autopsy studies conducted in the ICU and discusses the pros and cons of performing these.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20565845 PMCID: PMC3226293 DOI: 10.1186/cc8925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Classification of discrepancies between pre- and post-mortem diagnoses (according to Goldman and colleagues [3])
| Class I: may have altered therapy or survival |
| Class II: would not have altered therapy or survival |
| Class III: would not have altered therapy or survival |
| Class IV: may have altered therapy or survival |
| Class V: complete agreement between clinical and post-mortem diagnosis |
| Class VI: patients died immediately after admission with no diagnostic procedure or refused any diagnostic procedure. Autopsy was unsatisfactory, with no clear findings and no diagnosis could be established |
Strategies to improve autopsy rate
| Coordinate autopsies with the schedules of requesting physicians |
| Faster processing of the autopsy reports |
| Provision of resources for performing autopsies |
| Creation of regional autopsy centres |
| Provides opportunities to improve autopsy quality |
| Develops strategies for using autopsy results to improve clinical performance |
| Improvement of training for pathology residents |
| Better education of medical students |
| Quality control of performed autopsies (different pathologists interpreting the same autopsy specimens) in order to improve diagnostic value |
| Provide opportunities to improve autopsy quality by specialization |
| Allow physicians complete discretion in requesting autopsies (arbitrary sampling as a result will augment the numbers of important misdiagnoses) |
| Analyse data from regional centres to identify patterns of missed diagnoses and to generate prediction rules that would enhance the process of case selection |
| Augment autopsy numbers with widespread use of structured death reviews and structured reports of epidemiological statistics on various diseases encountered in the ICU |
| Communicate the conclusion of the autopsy report to the relatives |
| Clinicopathological conferences on a monthly basis attended by the treating intensivist, the radiologist and the pathologist |
| Interesting cases should be published with the aim of education and improving knowledge of epidemiology |
Overview of recently performed autopsy studies in the ICU setting
| Author | Period | Studied population | Type of hospital* | Study design | Autopsy rate (%) | Number of autopsies | Class I error (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roosen | 1996 | Medical | Referral, Belgium | Retrospective | 93 | 100 | 36 | 16 |
| Combes | 11/1995 to 10/1998 | Mixed | Referral, France | Prospective | 53 | 167 | 31.7 | 10.2 |
| Dimopoulos | 1999 | Mixed | Referral, Belgium | Retrospective | 45 | 222 | 8.5 | 5.4 |
| Maris | 1/2004 to 12/2005 | Mixed | Referral, Belgium | Retrospective | 37 | 289 | 19 | 6 |
| Nadrous | 1/1998 to 12/2000 | Mixed | Referral, USA | Retrospective | 33 | 455 | 21 | 4 |
| Tai | 1/1994 to 12/1995 | Medical | Referral, USA | Retrospective | 22 | 91 | 19.78 | 8.79 |
| Mort | 7/1986 to 7/1992 | Surgical | Referral, USA | Retrospective | 29 | 149 | 23 | 9.5 |
| Podbregar | 1/1998 to 12/1999 | Medical | Referral, Slovenia | Retrospective | 46 | 126 | 52.4 | 12 |
| Twigg | 6/1996 to 5/1999 | Mixed | District, UK | Retrospective | 40 | 97 | 23.71 | 4.12 |
| Silfvast | 1/1996 to 12/2000 | Mixed | Referral, Finland | Retrospective | 89 | 346 | 5 | 2.3 |
| Fernandez-Segoviano | 5/1983 to 12/1985 | Mixed | Referral, Spain | Prospective | 51 | 100 | 22 | 7 |
| Pastores | 1/1999 to 9/2005 | Oncologic | Referral, USA | Retrospective | 13 | 86 | 26 | 17 |
| Ong | 1/1997 to 12/1998 | Trauma and burns | Referral, USA | Retrospective | 97 | 153 | 18.95 | 3 |
| Al-Saidi | 11/1994 to 6/1999 | Bone marrow transplant | Referral, Canada | Retrospective | 47 | 28 | 10.7 | 3.6 |
| Gerain | 11/1985 to 10/1986 | Oncologic | Referral, Belgium | Retrospective | 69 | 34 | 59 | Unknown |
*Referral: a hospital that is linked to a university, deals with general admissions and with referrals from other hospitals. †Major error: class I or II according to Goldman's criteria of missed diagnoses [3].