On 2015 Mar 24, Michelle Lin commented:
Video interview with first author, Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman (UCSF Department of Radiology), and co-author Dr. Ralph Wang (UCSF Department of Emergency Medicine) hosted at the Academic Life in Emergency Medicine website. In this video, questions and nuances in this landmark paper were addressed.
http://www.aliem.com/author-insight-ultrasonography-versus-ct-for-suspected-nephrolithiasis-nejm/
Four questions were posed:
Q1: About 1/3 of patients in the ultrasound study arms eventually went on to get CT’s in the same ED stay. What would you recommend to clinicians about when that should be?
Q2: Can you address generalizability issues in this 15-center study whereby the cohort has 40% with a history of previous kidney stones and only 60% demonstrating microscopic hematuria. Also what are your recommendations for obese patients (men >280 lb, women >250 lb) who were excluded from your study? CT them all?
Q3: What has been the feedback from urologists since the paper was published? What are the drivers of CT ordering?
Q4: What’s next? What’s NOT in your paper?
Ultimately, this paper advocates for bedside ultrasonography over CT as the first-line diagnostic modality for patients with suspected kidney stones. In this 15-center study, the ~1800 ultrasounded patients had good primary and secondary outcomes despite the fact that 2/3 did NOT undergo a CT in the first ED visit.
This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.