European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle

Abstract Background The Commission of the European Communities (CEC) has published: European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for Diagnostic Radiographic Images. These guidelines are considered a gold standard, recommended for use in quality assurance protocols. The objectives of this study: 1) Propos...

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Main Authors: Klaus Doktor, Maria Lind Vilholm, Aldis Hardardóttir, Henrik Wulff Christensen, Jens Lauritsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00375-4
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spelling doaj-5aa4c0884f76430eb4a7bed8710ac8612021-05-30T11:52:33ZengBMCChiropractic & Manual Therapies2045-709X2021-05-0129111010.1186/s12998-021-00375-4European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principleKlaus Doktor0Maria Lind Vilholm1Aldis Hardardóttir2Henrik Wulff Christensen3Jens Lauritsen4Research Unit for Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkPrivate Chiropractic Practice, Back Center Midwestern JutlandPrivate Chiropractic PracticeNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical BiomechanicsInstitute of Clinical Medicine, University of Southern Denmark and Orthopedic Department, Odense University HospitalAbstract Background The Commission of the European Communities (CEC) has published: European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for Diagnostic Radiographic Images. These guidelines are considered a gold standard, recommended for use in quality assurance protocols. The objectives of this study: 1) Propose a graded classification format for Danish chiropractic clinics according to the CEC-quality criteria for diagnostic radiographic images of the lumbar spine. 2) Propose a reporting principle for quality of radiographic images. 3) Document variation in radiation exposure among clinics. Methods This is a cross-sectional study of image quality based on random sampling from 148 chiropractic clinics. Clinics were included if using: 1) Digital radiography and 2) The chiropractic picture and archiving system (KirPACS) at the Nordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics (NIKKB) in Denmark. A sample of 296 lumbar spine series were randomly collected from KirPACS (January 2018). Two independent observers reviewed 50 lumbar spine series twice with a 4-week interval, testing intra- and inter-observer reproducibility. The same observers then reviewed the remaining 246 radiographic studies. All studies were evaluated using the CEC Quality Criteria. Patient radiation dose values were retrieved from KirPACS (First quarter of 2020). Results A reporting and classification principle of diagnostic image quality was used in 148 chiropractic clinics. Compliance with the 22 CEC Quality Criteria had proportions ranging from 0.72–0.96 for 18 criteria, while 4 criteria specifying detail and definition ranged between 0.20–0.66. The proposed rating system (A to E) revealed: 18 A clinics, 28 B clinics, 32 C clinics, 25 D clinics and 45 E clinics (A = highest quality; E = lowest quality). The patient radiation reference dose in Denmark is 7 mGy for the AP/PA lumbar spine. Very few clinics exceed the reference dose value, approximately 50% of clinics were below 5 mGy. Conclusion A reporting principle is proposed for a graded classification format based on the CEC-quality criteria for diagnostic radiographic images of the lumbar spine. The Quality Criteria are for the most part met satisfactorily in 148 Danish chiropractic clinics, but important image details are compromised, in most cases, because of low patient radiation doses. The results of a patient radiation dose survey enabled documentation of variation in radiation exposure among chiropractic clinics.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00375-4Image qualityQuality assuranceGuidelinesLumbar spineRadiographPrimary care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Klaus Doktor
Maria Lind Vilholm
Aldis Hardardóttir
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Lauritsen
spellingShingle Klaus Doktor
Maria Lind Vilholm
Aldis Hardardóttir
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Lauritsen
European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Image quality
Quality assurance
Guidelines
Lumbar spine
Radiograph
Primary care
author_facet Klaus Doktor
Maria Lind Vilholm
Aldis Hardardóttir
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Jens Lauritsen
author_sort Klaus Doktor
title European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
title_short European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
title_full European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
title_fullStr European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
title_full_unstemmed European guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
title_sort european guidelines on radiographic image quality in chiropractic practice – proposal of a cross-sectional graded classification reporting principle
publisher BMC
series Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
issn 2045-709X
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background The Commission of the European Communities (CEC) has published: European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for Diagnostic Radiographic Images. These guidelines are considered a gold standard, recommended for use in quality assurance protocols. The objectives of this study: 1) Propose a graded classification format for Danish chiropractic clinics according to the CEC-quality criteria for diagnostic radiographic images of the lumbar spine. 2) Propose a reporting principle for quality of radiographic images. 3) Document variation in radiation exposure among clinics. Methods This is a cross-sectional study of image quality based on random sampling from 148 chiropractic clinics. Clinics were included if using: 1) Digital radiography and 2) The chiropractic picture and archiving system (KirPACS) at the Nordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics (NIKKB) in Denmark. A sample of 296 lumbar spine series were randomly collected from KirPACS (January 2018). Two independent observers reviewed 50 lumbar spine series twice with a 4-week interval, testing intra- and inter-observer reproducibility. The same observers then reviewed the remaining 246 radiographic studies. All studies were evaluated using the CEC Quality Criteria. Patient radiation dose values were retrieved from KirPACS (First quarter of 2020). Results A reporting and classification principle of diagnostic image quality was used in 148 chiropractic clinics. Compliance with the 22 CEC Quality Criteria had proportions ranging from 0.72–0.96 for 18 criteria, while 4 criteria specifying detail and definition ranged between 0.20–0.66. The proposed rating system (A to E) revealed: 18 A clinics, 28 B clinics, 32 C clinics, 25 D clinics and 45 E clinics (A = highest quality; E = lowest quality). The patient radiation reference dose in Denmark is 7 mGy for the AP/PA lumbar spine. Very few clinics exceed the reference dose value, approximately 50% of clinics were below 5 mGy. Conclusion A reporting principle is proposed for a graded classification format based on the CEC-quality criteria for diagnostic radiographic images of the lumbar spine. The Quality Criteria are for the most part met satisfactorily in 148 Danish chiropractic clinics, but important image details are compromised, in most cases, because of low patient radiation doses. The results of a patient radiation dose survey enabled documentation of variation in radiation exposure among chiropractic clinics.
topic Image quality
Quality assurance
Guidelines
Lumbar spine
Radiograph
Primary care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00375-4
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