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Adrenal lesions found incidentally: how to improve clinical and cost-effectiveness

Hanna, FWF; Issa, BG; Lea, SC; George, C; Golash, A; Firn, M; Ogunmekan, S; Maddock, E; Sim, J; Xydopoulos, G; Fordham, R; Fryer, AA

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Authors

FWF Hanna

BG Issa

SC Lea

C George

A Golash

M Firn

S Ogunmekan

E Maddock

G Xydopoulos

R Fordham



Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Adrenal incidentalomas are lesions that are incidentally identified while scanning for other conditions. While most are benign and hormonally non-functional, around 20% are malignant and/or hormonally active, requiring prompt intervention. Malignant lesions can be aggressive and life-threatening, while hormonally active tumours cause various endocrine disorders, with significant morbidity and mortality. Despite this, management of patients with adrenal incidentalomas is variable, with no robust evidence base. This project aimed to establish more effective and timely management of these patients. METHODS: We developed a web-based, electronic Adrenal Incidentaloma Management System (eAIMS), which incorporated the evidence-based and National Health Service-aligned 2016 European guidelines. The system captures key clinical, biochemical and radiological information necessary for adrenal incidentaloma patient management and generates a pre-populated outcome letter, saving clinical and administrative time while ensuring timely management plans with enhanced safety. Furthermore, we developed a prioritisation strategy, with members of the multidisciplinary team, which prioritised high-risk individuals for detailed discussion and management. Patient focus groups informed process-mapping and multidisciplinary team process re-design and patient information leaflet development. The project was partnered by University Hospital of South Manchester to maximise generalisability. RESULTS: Implementation of eAIMS, along with improvements in the prioritisation strategy, resulted in a 49% reduction in staff hands-on time, as well as a 78% reduction in the time from adrenal incidentaloma identification to multidisciplinary team decision. A health economic analysis identified a 28% reduction in costs. CONCLUSIONS: The system's in-built data validation and the automatic generation of the multidisciplinary team outcome letter improved patient safety through a reduction in transcription errors. We are currently developing the next stage of the programme to proactively identify all new adrenal incidentaloma cases.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 22, 2019
Online Publication Date Feb 12, 2020
Publication Date Feb 1, 2020
Publicly Available Date May 26, 2023
Journal BMJ Open Quality
Print ISSN 2399-6641
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000572
Keywords decision support, computerised, diagnostic errors, healthcare quality improvement, continuous quality improvement, cost-effectiveness
Publisher URL http://doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000572
PMID 32054639

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