CLINICIAN'S CAPSULE
What is known about the topic?
Acute aortic dissection is rare, but often fatal; we are unsure who to image; and we miss one in five cases.
What did this study ask?
Is the quality of history taking associated with misdiagnosis of an acute aortic dissection?
What did this study find?
Physicians who asked more common pain questions (character, onset, severity, duration, and radiation) had a better initial identification of cases.
Why does this study matter to clinicians?
A complete and focused history could reduce your chance of missing an acute aortic dissection.
INTRODUCTION
Acute aortic dissection (AAD) is the most common aortic catastrophe, and one in five are missed on the first presentation, resulting in increased morbidity and mortality.Reference Rosman, Patel, Borzak, Paone and Retter1, Reference Harris, Strauss and Eagle2 In the age of clinical decision rules, aortic dissection has been identified as a priority for development.Reference Finnerty, Rodriguez and Carpenter3 Computed tomography (CT), ordered to rule out aortic dissection, has increased in the past number of years, and a staggering 98% of these are negative.Reference Harris, Strauss and Eagle2, Reference Ohle, Anjum, Bleeker, Wells and Perry4 With easier access to imaging, are we focusing less time on history?
We sought to explore the quality of history taking for those diagnosed with AAD and assess its impact on misdiagnosis.
METHODS
Study population
We included patients aged >18 years who presented to two tertiary care emergency departments (ED) or a regional cardiac referral centre from 2002 to 2014 with acute (<14 days) onset of non-traumatic abdominal/back/chest/flank pain (truncal pain) and a new diagnosis of AAD. Cases were identified and enrolled through the ED, in hospital, or by a death certificate diagnosis of aortic dissection, intramural hematoma, or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer.
We excluded patients with trauma within 24 hours of pain onset or known AAD. Data were extracted per guidelines put forward by Jansen et al.Reference Finnerty, Rodriguez and Carpenter3 Extracted data were verified in multiple sources including the ED record of treatment, consultant notes, and integrated progress notes. Four trained reviewers extracted data using standardized paper data forms. The kappa statistic for inter-observer agreement was calculated, with the data extraction form being considered a single variable. If extraction of any variable on the form varied between reviewers, then it was counted as a disagreement; if all variables on the form were identically extracted, then that data form was counted as agreement.
Outcome measures
AAD was defined based on radiological evidence of aortic dissection; intramural hematoma; or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer on CT, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). A missed case of AAD was defined by failure to diagnose within the ED, treatment for an alternative diagnosis (i.e., anticoagulation for a pulmonary embolism) within the ED, or re-presentation within 14 days of the initial visit with a new diagnosis of AAD.
Variables
ED records were evaluated for documentation of queries related to five descriptors of pain: character, onset, duration, severity, and radiation. These variables were chosen following a comprehensive systematic review of literature for statistically significant clinical findings, as well as consensus of the senior study team (practicing certified emergency medicine physicians) that the variables were clinically significant.Reference Harris, Strauss and Eagle2, Reference Ohle, Um and Anjum5, Reference Hansen, Nogareda and Hutchison6 See the appendix for the definitions of the variables.
Data analysis
Extracted clinical variables were entered into an electronic database. First, descriptive statistics including means, medians, the standard deviation for continuous variables, and percentages for dichotomous variables were calculated. Variables were assessed for association with missed AAD in a univariate analysis.
Continuous variables were compared using a two-sided Student t test for normal distributions and the Mann-Whitney U test for non-normal distributions. Categorical variables were compared using a chi-square or Fisher's exact test, as appropriate. The analysis was performed using SAS 9.4 University Edition. This study was approved by the institutional review board of the Ottawa Hospital.
RESULTS
Data were collected from 2002 to 2014, yielding 194 cases of AAD, with a mean age of 65 years (standard deviation [SD] 14.1), and 66.7% were male (Figure A-1, Table 1). The kappa after chart training was 0.85, and for study data extraction, it was 0.91. Of the 194 cases of AAD, 34 (17.6%) were missed on the initial ED presentation. There were 114 type A and 80 type B aortic dissections.
CI = confidence intervals.
Only 20 (14.8%) patients were asked all five questions. Further, no questions or one question was asked of 14.1% of the patients. The most common initial incorrect diagnosis was acute coronary syndrome (16, 47%), pulmonary embolism (5, 14.7%), and stroke (4, 11.7%) (Table A-1). The quality of history was associated with suspicion for aortic dissection. If all five questions were asked, the physician correctly suspected aortic dissection in 19 of 20 patients (95%). If more than two questions were asked, 94% of all aortic dissections were correctly identified. The miss rate was 1 in 17 or 6%. If two or fewer questions were asked, one in five (20%) cases was missed. Asking more than two questions resulted in a significant increase in the likelihood of the correct diagnosis (p < 0.01), with a sensitivity of 93.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 82.4–97.6). The most common questions not asked were the severity of pain, duration, and radiation.
DISCUSSION
Aortic dissection is one of the deadly causes of chest pain. It can present with a myriad of symptoms often overlapping with more common diagnoses. This can result in a significant number being misdiagnosed.Reference Finnerty, Rodriguez and Carpenter3 In our study, one in five patients was initially misdiagnosed. The diagnostic test of choice is CT of the aorta. However, this carries a significant radiation burden and results in longer ED stays, in addition to increasing costs.Reference Ohle, Anjum, Bleeker, Wells and Perry4, Reference Lovy, Bellin, Levsky, Esses and Haramati7 With increased access to CT, the number of imaging studies in the ED has increased, without a decrease in the miss rate. Only 1 in 50 CT scans is actually positive for an aortic dissection.Reference Jansen, van Aalst-Cohen and Hutten8 In the age of clinical decision rules, clinicians rate aortic dissection as the number one priority for developing a new decision tool.Reference Ohle, Kareemi, Wells and Perry9 However, could simply improving the quality of history taking improve missed diagnosis and reduce imaging?
This hypothesis-generating study found that a focused history of important pain characteristics was associated with fewer missed cases of AAD. We found that if three or more questions were asked, only 6% of cases were missed, as compared with 22% if two or fewer questions were asked. Our findings are similar to those of Rosmans’ 1998 study, which found that asking three specific pain questions (quality, radiation, and speed of onset of pain) was associated with a reduction in missed cases of AAD.Reference Ohle, Um and Anjum5, Reference Kurabayashi, Miwa and Ueshima10
It makes clinical sense that a more complete history has the potential to reduce diagnostic error. In an age of easier access to advanced imaging, history taking is still the keystone of diagnostic accuracy.
LIMITATIONS
This is a retrospective study, and it is difficult to know whether missing values for history taking truly represent a lack of asking a complete history or documentation. However, even if it does represent a lack of documentation, it speaks to a lack of consideration of aortic dissection. Documentation is often completed at the end of a clinical encounter, with classic features for a condition more likely to be documented if the clinician thinks it is the most likely diagnosis. It could be that reaffirming the importance of documentation could act as a cognitive forcing strategy to help clinicians think about the diagnosis of aortic dissection.
Our population contains patients in whom AAD was identified at some point during their evaluation. Because patients with unrecognized AAD do not appear in the database and because these patients may, in fact, be unrecognized as a result of atypical presentations, this might have affected our results. In addition, this study was conducted at an academic tertiary care and cardiac referral centre and, thus, could be subject to referral bias.
CONCLUSIONS
In patients with an eventual diagnosis of AAD, physicians who asked more common pain questions had a better initial identification of cases. Ask and document the character, onset, duration, radiation, and severity in any patient presenting with chest, abdominal, or flank pain. A focused history appears to be important in reducing the likelihood of missing AAD.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/cem.2019.1.
Acknowledgements
Dr. Ohle was responsible for study conception and oversight; in addition to data analysis and manuscript preparation, he acts as guarantor of the paper, taking responsibility for the integrity of the work, from inception to published article. We acknowledge the help of Justin Um, Lindy Luo, Omar Anjum, and Helena Bleeker in data extraction. Dr. Mc Isaac was involved in the manuscript editing and writing. Dr. Perry provided methodological input and oversight.
Competing interests
None.