医学
磁共振成像
超声波
放射科
前瞻性队列研究
卵巢癌
体格检查
癌症
外科
内科学
作者
P. Pinto,L. Valentin,Martina Borčinová,Markéta Wiesnerová,Fruhauf Filip,Andrea Burgetová,Martin Mašek,Lukáš Lambert,Valentina Chiappa,D. Franchi,A. C. Testa,F. Moro,Giacomo Avesani,Camilla Panico,S. Alessi,Paola Pricolo,Raffaella Vigorito,Giuseppina Calareso,Roman Kocián,J Sláma
出处
期刊:International Journal of Gynecological Cancer
[BMJ]
日期:2024-03-26
卷期号:: ijgc-005264
被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1136/ijgc-2023-005264
摘要
Background In addition to the diagnostic accuracy of imaging methods, patient-reported satisfaction with imaging methods is important. Objective To report a secondary outcome of the prospective international multicenter Imaging Study in Advanced ovArian Cancer (ISAAC Study), detailing patients’ experience with abdomino-pelvic ultrasound, whole-body contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT), and whole-body diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (WB-DWI/MRI) for pre-operative ovarian cancer work-up. Methods In total, 144 patients with suspected ovarian cancer at four institutions in two countries (Italy, Czech Republic) underwent ultrasound, CT, and WB-DWI/MRI for pre-operative work-up between January 2020 and November 2022. After having undergone all three examinations, the patients filled in a questionnaire evaluating their overall experience and experience in five domains: preparation before the examination, duration of examination, noise during the procedure, radiation load of CT, and surrounding space. Pain perception, examination-related patient-perceived unexpected, unpleasant, or dangerous events (‘adverse events’), and preferred method were also noted. Results Ultrasound was the preferred method by 49% (70/144) of responders, followed by CT (38%, 55/144), and WB-DWI/MRI (13%, 19/144) (p<0.001). The poorest experience in all domains was reported for WB-DWI/MRI, which was also associated with the largest number of patients who reported adverse events (eg, dyspnea). Patients reported higher levels of pain during the ultrasound examination than during CT and WB-DWI/MRI (p<0.001): 78% (112/144) reported no pain or mild pain, 19% (27/144) moderate pain, and 3% (5/144) reported severe pain (pain score >7 of 10) during the ultrasound examination. We did not identify any factors related to patients' preferred method. Conclusion Ultrasound was the imaging method preferred by most patients despite being associated with more pain during the examination in comparison with CT and WB-DWI/MRI. Trial registration number NCT03808792 .