Friday, February 01, 2008

Imaging Turf Wars

Well the inaugural issue of JACC Cardiovascular Imaging was just come out and heralds cardiologists as cardiovascular imaging experts. Eugene Braunwald's welcome letter was telling:
"Despite its great advantages, selective angiography is an invasive technique that may be uncomfortable, entails some minimal risk to the patient, and is expensive. It can be applied only a limited number of times in each patient and it is not suitable for screening. Therefore, physicians caring for patients with known or suspected heart disease yearned for noninvasive cardiac imaging. Fortunately, 2 new techniques—echocardiography and nuclear imaging—became available in the 1960s and have improved progressively since then. Literally tens of millions of these examinations are performed each year, transforming medical practice. In the 1980s, 3 new noninvasive imaging techniques—computed tomography (CT), cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging, and positron emission tomography (PET, a nuclear technique)—emerged. Each of these provides information on cardiac structure and function that is an order of magnitude greater than the earlier imaging techniques.

None of the aforementioned techniques are static and all are undergoing progressive refinement. Many important advances have been made by subspecialists in a single technique such as echocardiographers, nuclear cardiologists, and specialists in CT, CMR, or PET imaging, respectively. Each of these imaging modalities have their individual training programs, and the advances in these fields are described in specialized journals, each devoted to a single technique. Although this approach has been responsible for spectacular advances in each modality, it has led to fragmentation of patient evaluation, at times to competition between individual modalities, and to increased costs at a time of diminishing resources to pay for health care.

There is a growing consensus that the time has come to consider cardiovascular imaging in a more comprehensive, unified manner. We need a new generation of cardiac imagers who are expert with the entire portfolio of modalities and who can provide a nonbiased selection of the technique that can best solve the clinical or research problem at hand. To develop these broadly-based experts, we need new unified training programs that break down what are sometimes artificial interdepartmental and intradepartmental barriers.

Another important tool in shifting the imaging paradigm is to develop a journal of cardiovascular imaging. The Publications Committee of the American College of Cardiology and its talented staff, working closely with the College leadership, developed a vision for and then the concrete plans for the creation of JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging. The committee and its consultants selected the Editor-in-Chief, Dr. Jagat Narula, from a group of distinguished cardiac imagers. Dr. Narula has put together an outstanding group of associate editors, editorial board members, and consultants. They now deserve the cooperation of the entire cardiovascular community as they proceed on their important mission.
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Radiologists are none too happy, I'm sure. No doubt they might take issue with the claim of "We need a new generation of cardiac imagers who are expert with the entire portfolio of modalities and who can provide a nonbiased selection of the technique that can best solve the clinical or research problem at hand." The friendly collaboration between radiologists and cardiologists went out the window long ago.

Why?

It's all about the money.

-Wes

3 comments:

  1. This isn't related to your post but I was wondering if you had any insight as to why hospitals tend to permit unhealthy fast foods to reside within them? Not only chain restaurants but many cafeterias serve this style of food. I was guessing it was to lease out space and make some extra money.

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  2. nickel-

    I mentioned the use of food services to make money previously. Yes, "unhealthy" fast foods are occasionally found in hospitals, but sometimes there are instances where a kid on chemo might benefit from the calories of a Kid's Meal from McDonalds rather than not eating the hospital's more conventional cafeteria offerings. As long as there's other food options, if the hospital makes a few bucks, I suppose I'm not adverse to providing venues for vendors. I guess I'm just not a real food-Nazi - people will eat junk food, irrespective of where its offered and often irrespective of what doctors suggest. Hopefully, when they look down at their waistline, they'll consider their options wisely.

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  3. do radiologists do a lot of stress sestamibis in your corner of the world? and cardiac caths?

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