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Office Practice Mammography Recall Rates Lower Than Hospitals

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 30 Jul 2013
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The rate at which women get a call back for additional imaging studies after screening mammography may be higher at hospitals than at community office practices, chiefly due to differences among the patients.

The new findings were published online July 2013 in the journal Radiology. The findings highlight the limitations of recall rates as a quality gauge for breast cancer screening, according to the researchers. Recall rates for mammography indicate to the percentage of women who undergo screening and are called back for additional testing. Since recalls involve anxiety for patients and additional costs, there have been efforts to keep these rates as low as possible.

“Recall rate by itself is used as a quality indicator by the federal government,” said Ana Lourenco, MD, radiologist at the Rhode Island Hospital (Providence, RI, USA) and the Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University (Providence, RI, USA) “Therefore, it remains important to understand the factors that influence recall rate for individuals and practices.”

To better clarify these factors, Dr. Lourenco and colleagues reviewed data between May 2008 and September 2011 for five radiologists with specialties in breast imaging who interpreted mammograms at a community office practice and an academic referral hospital. Both sites utilized full-field digital mammography and batch screening interpretation.

The radiologists interpreted a total of 74,297 screening mammograms between both sites during the study. The total number of patients recalled was 5,799, for an overall recall rate of 7.8%. At 6.9%, the recall rate at the community site was significantly lower than the hospital rate of 8.6%. “For every radiologist, the recall rate was significantly lower in community practice than in the hospital setting,” noted Dr. Lourenco.

When the researchers compared the two groups of patients, they found some important differences that could have influenced recall rates. Significantly, more of the hospital patients had undergone earlier biopsies and surgeries. Slightly more than 13% of the patients at the hospital site had a history of surgery, compared with 5.6% at the community site, and 7% of patients at the hospital had undergone a biopsy, compared with 1.4% at the community site.

“These patients may have more complicated mammograms to interpret or may be at higher risk for cancer than patients at the community site,” Dr. Lourenco said. “Higher risk patients would be expected to increase the recall rate of the population.”

Another key factor was the age of the patients. The mean age of the patients at the hospital site was 56 years, compared with a mean age of 63 years at the private practice. “Younger age has been associated with higher recall rates,” Dr. Lourenco said.

Even though Dr. Lourenco commended efforts to develop quality metrics for breast cancer screening, she stressed that recall rates are affected by factors out of the radiologist’s control, and therefore, cannot alone determine the quality of a radiologist or an institution.

Related Links:
Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University


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