BACKGROUND: Emergency physicians (EPs) perform critical actions while operating with diagnostic uncertainty. Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is useful in evaluation of dyspneic patients. In prior studies, POCUS is often performed by ultrasound (US) teams without patient care responsibilities. OBJECTIVES: This study evaluates the effectiveness of POCUS in narrowing diagnostic uncertainty in dyspneic patients when performed by treating EPs vs. separate US teams. METHODS: This multicenter, prospective noninferiority cohort study investigated the effect of a POCUS performing team in patient encounters for dyspnea. Before-and-after surveys assessing medical decision-making were administered to attending physicians. Primary outcome was change in most likely diagnosis after POCUS. This was assessed for noninferiority between encounters where the primary or US team performed POCUS. Secondary outcomes included change in differential diagnosis, confidence in diagnosis, interventions considered, and image quality. RESULTS: There were 156 patient encounters analyzed. In the primary team group, most likely diagnosis changed in 40% (95% confidence interval 28-52%) of encounters vs. 32% (95% confidence interval 22-41%) in the US team group. This was noninferior using an a priori specified margin of 20% (p < .0001). Post-POCUS differential decreased by a mean 1.8 diagnoses and was equivalent within a margin of 0.5 diagnoses between performing teams (p = 0.034). Other outcomes were similar between groups. CONCLUSION: POCUS performed by primary teams was noninferior to POCUS performed by US teams for changing the most likely diagnosis, and equivalent when considering mean reduction in number of diagnoses. POCUS performed by treating EPs reduces cognitive burden in dyspneic patients.
BACKGROUND: Emergency physicians (EPs) perform critical actions while operating with diagnostic uncertainty. Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is useful in evaluation of dyspneic patients. In prior studies, POCUS is often performed by ultrasound (US) teams without patient care responsibilities. OBJECTIVES: This study evaluates the effectiveness of POCUS in narrowing diagnostic uncertainty in dyspneic patients when performed by treating EPs vs. separate US teams. METHODS: This multicenter, prospective noninferiority cohort study investigated the effect of a POCUS performing team in patient encounters for dyspnea. Before-and-after surveys assessing medical decision-making were administered to attending physicians. Primary outcome was change in most likely diagnosis after POCUS. This was assessed for noninferiority between encounters where the primary or US team performed POCUS. Secondary outcomes included change in differential diagnosis, confidence in diagnosis, interventions considered, and image quality. RESULTS: There were 156 patient encounters analyzed. In the primary team group, most likely diagnosis changed in 40% (95% confidence interval 28-52%) of encounters vs. 32% (95% confidence interval 22-41%) in the US team group. This was noninferior using an a priori specified margin of 20% (p < .0001). Post-POCUS differential decreased by a mean 1.8 diagnoses and was equivalent within a margin of 0.5 diagnoses between performing teams (p = 0.034). Other outcomes were similar between groups. CONCLUSION: POCUS performed by primary teams was noninferior to POCUS performed by US teams for changing the most likely diagnosis, and equivalent when considering mean reduction in number of diagnoses. POCUS performed by treating EPs reduces cognitive burden in dyspneic patients.
Authors: Andrew J Inglis; Marek Nalos; Kwan-Hing Sue; Jan Hruby; Daniel M Campbell; Rachel M Braham; Sam R Orde Journal: Crit Care Resusc Date: 2016-06 Impact factor: 2.159
Authors: Kenton L Anderson; Katherine Y Jenq; J Matthew Fields; Nova L Panebianco; Anthony J Dean Journal: Am J Emerg Med Date: 2013-06-13 Impact factor: 2.469
Authors: Said Laribi; Gerben Keijzers; Oene van Meer; Sharon Klim; Justina Motiejunaite; Win Sen Kuan; Richard Body; Peter Jones; Mehmet Karamercan; Simon Craig; Veli-Pekka Harjola; Anna Holdgate; Adela Golea; Colin Graham; Franck Verschuren; Jean Capsec; Michael Christ; Leslie Grammatico-Guillon; Cinzia Barletta; Luis Garcia-Castrillo; Anne-Maree Kelly Journal: Eur J Emerg Med Date: 2019-10 Impact factor: 2.799
Authors: Laurent Muller; Xavier Bobbia; Mehdi Toumi; Guillaume Louart; Nicolas Molinari; Benoit Ragonnet; Hervé Quintard; Marc Leone; Lana Zoric; Jean Yves Lefrant Journal: Crit Care Date: 2012-10-08 Impact factor: 9.097