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The Benefits of Computed Tomographic Colonography...
Journal article

The Benefits of Computed Tomographic Colonography in Reducing a Long Colonoscopy Waiting List

Abstract

PURPOSE: The Radiology Department, Royal Jubilee Hospital, Victoria, BC, with the support of gastroenterologists and surgeons, was awarded a BC Innovation fund to run a pilot project of computed tomographic colonography to reduce an unacceptably long 2-year colonoscopy waiting list. Funds were approved in April 2007 for a 1-year project, which was completed on March 31, 2008. METHODS: This article describes the challenges of delivering a high-volume computed tomographic colonography program at a busy community hospital, with discussion of the results for the 2,005 patients who were examined. RESULTS: Colonoscopy was avoided in 1,462 patients whose computed tomographic studies showed no significant lesions. In the remainder of patients, only lesions larger than 5 mm were reported, with a total of 508 lesions identified in 433 patients. There were 57 cancers of which 52 were reported as either definite or possible cancers, whereas 5 were not seen on initial scans. Some of the patients with cancer had been on the colonoscopy waiting list for 2 years. In addition, there were 461 patients with significant extracolonic findings, including 84 who required urgent or semi-urgent further management for previously unsuspected conditions, such as pneumonia, aneurysms larger than 5 cm, and a range of solid renal, hepatic, and pancreatic masses. There were no procedural complications from the computed tomographic colon studies. CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that it is feasible to run a high volume CTC service in a general hospital given hospital support and funding. The benefits in this group of over 2000 patients included avoidance of colonoscopy in over 70% of patients, detection of significant polyps or cancer in approximately 20% of patients, and identification of clinically important conditions in 7%-18% depending on the definition used. The estimated costs including capital, operating, and professional fees were in the range of $400.

Authors

Behrens C; Stevenson G; Eddy R; Pearson D; Hayashi A; Audet L; Mathieson J

Journal

Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal, Vol. 61, No. 1, pp. 33–40

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

February 1, 2010

DOI

10.1016/j.carj.2009.09.003

ISSN

0846-5371

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