| Literature DB >> 35475096 |
Alexander Reid1, Emily Weig1, Kirsten Dickinson2, Faraaz Zafar1, Roshan Abid1, Marta VanBeek1, Nkanyezi Ferguson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mohs micrographic surgery requires focused attention that may lead to tunnel vision bias, contributing to not recognizing skin cancer at nearby sites.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive bias; decision making process; dermatology and dermatologic surgery; heuristic decision; quality improvement and patient safety
Year: 2022 PMID: 35475096 PMCID: PMC9035314 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.23487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Outline of the method used to determine the number of Mohs sequences generated by an example patient’s chart. Photographs of the defect at the subsequent Mohs procedure were compared to photographs taken at the time of the prior Mohs procedure to determine if the defect corresponded to a visible but unrecognized skin lesion.
Characteristics between unrecognized versus recognized cancer event groups.
*P-value from Mann-Whitney U test for non-parametric data
†P-value from chi-square
‡ Immunosuppression includes chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and organ transplant on immunosuppressive medications
§ High Risk: Basal cell carcinoma: morpheaform, basosquamous, infiltrative and micronodular; squamous cell carcinoma: poorly differentiated and moderately differentiated; melanoma (any subtype)
| Characteristic | Unrecognized Cancer Event | Recognized Cancer Event | P-value | ||
| Median Age in Years | 76 | 71 | 0.388 * | ||
| Age Range in Years | 32-90 | 42-93 | |||
| Male Sex | Number | Percent | Number | Percent | 0.067 † |
| 33 | 65 | 99 | 78 | ||
| Immunosuppression ‡ | 7 | 14 | 49 | 39 | 0.001 † |
| High Risk § | 10 | 20 | 31 | 24 | 0.491 † |
| Low Risk | 41 | 80 | 96 | 76 | |
| Median Mohs Interval in Months | High Risk § | Low Risk | 0.747 * | ||
| 4 | 6 | ||||
| Mohs Interval Interquartile Range in Months | 7 | 7 | |||
| Range of Mohs Intervals in Months | 2-18 | 1-28 | |||
Figure 2Unrecognized squamous cell carcinoma (at least in situ) on the right cheek at the time of Mohs surgery.
Figure 3Unrecognized basal cell carcinoma on the right forehead at the time of Mohs surgery.
Cognitive Forcing strategies to combat tunnel vision bias (adapted from Lowenstein).
| Cognitive Forcing Strategy | Practical Application |
| Change the base case assumption | Do not assume that a return or referred patient is fully worked up. Rather, assume undiagnosed secondary problems are present that require thoughtful evaluation. |
| Use a checklist | Assess regional skin in the field of surgery as a routine part of each patient visit to help minimize missing diagnoses. |
| Engage in self-assessment | Review prior objective evidence- photographs, biopsy reports, lab tests- for signs of medical error that may have been overlooked due to heuristics. Keep a log of these diagnostic errors to periodically review and prevent future cognitive bias. |
| Avoid fatigue and reduce cognitive strain | Consider small glucose snacks to refill one’s mental reserve, get adequate sleep, limit interruptions, allocate ample time for cognitively demanding cases. |
| Alter the practice environment | Build extra time into your schedule to allow for feedback, checklists, and reflective self-evaluation. Consider using scribes and information technology to allow more focused energy on patient care. |