Purpose: To perform a survey-based assessment of imaging practice preferences in Crohn's disease (CD).
Methods: An internet-based questionnaire was sent to physicians involved in CD care. The questionnaire addressed the experience, practice patterns, choice of modality, and recent trends in imaging utilization.
Results: The response rate was 7.57% (122/1598) with 43.8% of respondents involved in care of CD for ≥10 years. CT was mostly preferred by ED physicians, internists and primary care physicians, while MRI by gastroenterologists and pediatricians. Practitioners from non-teaching facilities had higher preference for CT (CT:42% andMR:27%), compared to teaching/academic hospitals (MR:45% and CT: 40%) (p = 0.06). MR was preferred by pediatric practitioners compared to physicians serving older age group of patients (>16 yrs) (p = 0.01). CT was preferred by physicians taking care of <50 patients/year (CT:37, MR:27, No preference = 19) and MR preferred by physicians serving ≥50 patients/year (CT:12, MR:21, No preference:3)(p = 0.02). CT/CT enterography was the most widely used exam (93.3%) and preferred modality for evaluation of acute CD exacerbation (87.7%), followed by assessment for new symptoms (73.7%) and extra-intestinal manifestations (61.3%). MR/MR enterography (58%) was more preferred for asymptomatic CD patients for disease surveillance. Nearly 80% of respondents reported a change in imaging preferences, 46.5% respondents indicating growing preference for MRI while 33.3% reported increasing preference for CT. 29.6% physicians reported a patient preference for MRI over CT (13%) with the most common factor for choice of MRI being fear of harmful effects of radiation (60.2%).
Conclusion: Physician practices reported continued preference for CT in evaluation of patients with CD, particularly for evaluation of acute exacerbation, new symptoms or extra-intestinal manifestations. Physician providers with large practice volume, younger patient population and GI sub-specialty expertise report growing MRI utilization.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinimag.2018.12.003 | DOI Listing |
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