Initial pneumonia diagnoses often revised in the hospital
Over half of pneumonia patients face diagnostic discrepancies between admission to discharge
Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-2505
Editorial: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M24-0889
URL goes live when the embargo lifts
Researchers from the University of Utah and Salt Lake City VA Healthcare System used administrative data and natural language processing to study the accuracy of a diagnosis of pneumonia among over 2 million admissions to Veterans Administration hospitals between 2015 and 2022. To explore the change in a pneumonia diagnosis across a hospitalization, the researchers classified each hospitalization according to concordance or discordance in diagnoses of pneumonia between three states: initial diagnosis made in the ED; initial chest image reports; and discharge. They then measured the concordance of the admission diagnosis of pneumonia, a radiographic finding consistent with pneumonia, and a discharge diagnosis of pneumonia. They found that 36% of patients had an admitting diagnosis of pneumonia but no discharge diagnosis, and 33% had a discharge diagnosis of pneumonia, but not an admission diagnosis. Discordance between a diagnosis of pneumonia and chest radiograph findings was also common.
An accompanying editorial from the University of Connecticut School of Medicine says that clinicians accept diagnostic uncertainty in pneumonia because treating all possibilities has not been shown to be inferior to any available alternative. While CT for all patients with suspected pneumonia may improve accuracy, it still would not likely change the treatment, as symptoms and treatment of pneumonia overlap with several other conditions including heart failure and COPD. The author agrees that more research is needed and suggests that studies should quantify the level of harm related to an incorrect diagnosis of pneumonia, as doing so would better define the level of importance of interventions to address the issue.
Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at [email protected]. To speak with corresponding author Barbara Jones, MD, please email Sophia Friesen at [email protected] or Carrie Milligan at [email protected].