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Delayed imaging diagnoses cause four deaths in Ireland

by John R. Fischer, Senior Reporter | December 12, 2018
European News
An Irish hospital is reviewing more
than 46,000 scans after delayed diagnoses
led to the deaths of four people
A hospital in Ireland has launched a review of more than 46,000 CT, ultrasound and X-ray images following delays in accurate diagnoses for 11 patients, four of which have since died.

Cared for at University Hospital Kerry, the patients were each diagnosed as healthy after undergoing a series of scans that were reviewed by a single consultant radiologist, according to the review which assessed all radiology reports examined by the clinician between March 2016 and July 2017. It is the largest of any radiology look-back audit conducted in Ireland.

“I would like to thank the patients and their families for the courtesy and understanding shown by them to the hospital staff in the course of this review,” Dr. Gerard O’Callaghan, chair of UHK’s Group Safety Incident Management Team, said in a statement. “This cannot have been easy, particularly when having to deal with devastating news which would have had a profound effect on them and their families.”
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The first delays were discovered in July and August 2017 in three patients who returned a few weeks after being given the all clear. Upon their return, the three were found to be suffering from cancer, and that their initial healthy diagnoses were due to a diagnostic error.

Following the diagnoses of four other patients who returned to UHK in the fall, a look-back review was launched to identify and address safety issues so that patients could be informed and provided access to follow-up care, if needed.

The audit examined 46,234 CT, ultrasound and chest X-rays related to 26,754 individual patients. The scans were originally assessed by a single consultant radiologist who was not named in the report, but was suspended and as of now, no longer works for the hospital.

Classification of the images was broken down into three categories: Score 1 for findings that were determined to match the original report or possess a minor abnormality of no ongoing clinical significance. Score 2 referred to unreported findings that were unlikely to be of clinical significant but would still be reviewed by a clinical subgroup with patients subject to possible re-scanning. Score 3 was assigned to images that revealed previously unreported findings of potential or definitive significant clinical concern that should immediately be referred to a clinical subgroup for evaluation.

The look-back audit classified 44,831 images as Score 1; 1,298 as Score 2; and 105 as Score 3.

Following the audit, a clinical subgroup assessed 1,789 radiology reports and other clinical records, recalling 422 patients. Of those that underwent re-imaging, 59 were required to undergo further clinical follow-ups or investigations following their scans, while 10 were referred to other hospitals for specialist care.

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