| Literature DB >> 30711002 |
Simon D French1,2,3, Michael E Green4,5, R Sacha Bhatia6,7, Yingwei Peng5, Jill A Hayden8, Jan Hartvigsen9,10, Noah M Ivers7,11, Jeremy M Grimshaw12,13, Christopher M Booth14, Lucia Rühland15, Kathleen E Norman15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At any one time, one in every five Canadians has low back pain (LBP), and LBP is one of the most common health problems in primary care. Guidelines recommend that imaging not be routinely performed in patients presenting with LBP without signs or symptoms indicating a potential pathological cause. Yet imaging rates remain high for many patients who present without such indications. Inappropriate imaging can lead to inappropriate treatments, results in worse health outcomes and causes harm from unnecessary radiation. There is a need to understand the extent of, and factors contributing to, inappropriate imaging for LBP, and to develop effective strategies that target modifiable barriers and facilitators. The primary study objectives are to determine: 1) The rate of, and factors associated with, inappropriate lumbar spine imaging (x-ray, CT scan and MRI) for people with non-specific LBP presenting to primary care clinicians in Ontario; 2) The barriers and facilitators to reduce inappropriate imaging for LBP in primary care settings.Entities:
Keywords: Administrative data analysis; Cohort study; Diagnostic imaging; Low back pain; Primary care; Qualitative study
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30711002 PMCID: PMC6359752 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2427-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Patient-level factors being measured that may be associated with inappropriate imaging
| Factor | Questionnaire items | Timing | ||||
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| Age | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Sex | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Education level | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Socio-economic status | Two questionnaire items: Postal code and education level | X | ||||
| Race/ethnicity | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Living arrangement | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Insurance status | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Compensation status (workplace injury or motor vehicle) | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Patient expectations of imaging | Single questionnaire item | X | X | |||
| Patient beliefs about imaging | Two questionnaire items [ | X | ||||
| Duration of low back pain | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Previous history of low back pain | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Low back pain intensity | Single questionnaire item (pain right now) | X | X | X | X | X |
| Leg pain intensity | Single questionnaire item (pain right now) | X | X | X | X | X |
| Recovery expectations | Single questionnaire item | X | X | |||
| Previous back surgery | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Previous medication and non-medication treatment | Single questionnaire items | X | ||||
| Previous imaging | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| General Health | Single questionnaire item | X | X | |||
| Physical activity level | Single questionnaire item | X | ||||
| Overweight or obesity | Two questionnaire items: Self-reported height and weight | X | ||||
| Possible pathological cause of back pain (fracture, infection, cancer, cauda equina syndrome) | Questionnaire items about: Trauma; History of cancer; Unexplained weight loss; IV drug user; Long term use of oral steroids | X | X | X | X | X |
| Anxiety | Two questionnaire items [ | X | X | |||
| Depression | Two questionnaire items [ | X | X | |||
| Confidence in ability to work and to live a normal lifestyle | Two questionnaire items | X | X | |||
| Disability | Questionnaire items: Roland Morris Q [ | X | X | X | X | |
| STarT Back risk category | Questionnaire items: STarT Back questionnaire [ | X | X | X | X | |
| Fear avoidance | Single questionnaire item 14 from the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK) [ | X | X | |||
| Pain Catastrophizing | Single questionnaire item 3 from Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) [ | X | X | |||
| Patient satisfaction | Single questionnaire item of global perceived effect | X | ||||
| Adverse events | Single questionnaire item [ | X | ||||
aAsked as part of STarT Back questionnaire at first visit
Clinician-level factors predictive of inappropriate imaging being investigated, all measured via baseline clinician questionnaire
| Factor | Questionnaire items |
|---|---|
| Age | Single questionnaire item |
| Sex | Single questionnaire item |
| Years in practice | Single questionnaire item |
| Clinician type (family doctor, chiropractor, physiotherapist) | Single questionnaire item |
| School of entry-to-practice training (for everyone); program of family medicine training (for family doctors only) | Single questionnaire item |
| Access to imaging (onsite or offsite) | Single questionnaire item asked as part of a list of items about onsite services |
| Ownership of imaging facilities | Single questionnaire item |
| Self-identification as having a speciality in back pain | Single questionnaire item [ |
| Clinician fear avoidance beliefs | Single questionnaire item: 14 from the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK), modified for clinician [ |
| Average time spent with patient | Single questionnaire item |
| Type of manual technique modalities practiced (for chiropractors) | Single questionnaire item |
| Beliefs on usefulness of imaging | Single item on questionnaire |
| Knowledge of imaging guidelines | Single item on questionnaire |
Fig. 1Flow chart of participant recruitment and data collection
Diagnostic imaging will be deemed inappropriate in the absence of these conditions that indicate a specific cause of low back pain [59]
| Condition | Sign or symptom |
|---|---|
| Cancer | History of cancer; unexplained weight loss |
| Infection | Immunosuppression; intravenous drug use |
| Fracture | Prolonged use of corticosteroids; history of significant trauma; minor fall or heavy lift in a potentially osteoporotic or elderly individual |
| Cauda equina syndrome | Acute onset of urinary retention or overflow incontinence; faecal incontinence; saddle anaesthesia |