Improving Recognition and Reporting of Malignant Central Airways Obstruction on CT: The Need for Standardized Terminology and Structured Reporting.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
환자: radiological CAO, defined as obstruction >50% in the trachea, main bronchi, or bronchus intermedius, were assessed
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
Conclusions Unreported CAO on CT scans, with variable and non-standardized terminology when present, is a concern. Adopting a standardized, structured reporting approach and the refinement of trigger words may improve CAO reporting and recognition.
Background Malignant central airways obstruction (CAO) is a clinically significant complication of lung cancer that can lead to severe morbidity if not promptly recognized and is frequently under-repo
APA
Pearce C, Crowle D, et al. (2026). Improving Recognition and Reporting of Malignant Central Airways Obstruction on CT: The Need for Standardized Terminology and Structured Reporting.. Cureus, 18(1), e101897. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.101897
MLA
Pearce C, et al.. "Improving Recognition and Reporting of Malignant Central Airways Obstruction on CT: The Need for Standardized Terminology and Structured Reporting.." Cureus, vol. 18, no. 1, 2026, pp. e101897.
PMID
41728428
Abstract
Background Malignant central airways obstruction (CAO) is a clinically significant complication of lung cancer that can lead to severe morbidity if not promptly recognized and is frequently under-reported on CT. Methodology All new annual lung cancer baseline CT scans were retrospectively reviewed as part of an audit process in 2014, 2019, and 2020. CT scans were assessed by the interventional pulmonology team. Patients with radiological CAO, defined as obstruction >50% in the trachea, main bronchi, or bronchus intermedius, were assessed. Narrative reports were separated into the main text section, conclusion, and addendum sections. Key phrases describing CAO were then extracted for further analysis. Analysis was performed in R Studio, tidytext, and wordcloud packages. Results In total, 140/1,096 (13%) new diagnoses of lung cancer had severe CAO on admission. No difference was seen across the three time periods (45/342 (13%) in 2014, 43/370 (12%) in 2019, and 52/351 (15%) in 2020; -valve = 0.448). Of these, 135/140 (96%) had available CT scan radiology reports. Patient performance status was >2 in 50/135 (37%). The presence of CAO was reported on the index CT scan in 97/135 (72%) of cases. The dominant obstructive component was extrinsic in 70/135 (52%), with a median (interquartile range (IQR)) area loss due to obstruction of 86% (64%-100%). The words (including truncations) central, obstruction, and occlusion were used in 29%, 36%, and 16% of the main text reports, respectively. Extracted key phrases that described CAO contained a median of 16 (9.5-25) words. The phrase or was not used in any CT reports. Conclusions Unreported CAO on CT scans, with variable and non-standardized terminology when present, is a concern. Adopting a standardized, structured reporting approach and the refinement of trigger words may improve CAO reporting and recognition.