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Cancer on a mammogram is not memorable: Readers remember their recalls and not cancers
Author(s) -
Pitman Alexander G,
Kok Phebe,
Zentner Lucila,
Taft Rodney,
Shnier Darryl,
Mercuri Vincenzo,
Mehta Kirti,
Lawson James,
Kremer Sarah,
Gledhill Samuel,
Cawson Jennifer N
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of medical imaging and radiation oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.31
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1754-9485
pISSN - 1754-9477
DOI - 10.1111/j.1754-9485.2012.02446.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cancer , medical physics
Aim To determine if presence of cancer on a mammogram makes that mammogram more memorable. Materials and methods A total of 100 mammograms (25 cancers) were grouped into 5 sets of 20 cases. Set pairs were presented in five reads to eight radiologist readers. Readers were asked to ‘clear’ or ‘call back’ cases, and at post‐baseline reads to indicate whether each case was ‘new’ or ‘old’ (remembered from prior read). Two sets were presented only at baseline, to calculate each reader's false recollection rate. For cases presented more than once (‘old’ cases, 100 presentations) readers could have ‘correct memory’ or ‘memory loss’. Memory performance was defined as odds ratio of correct memory to memory loss. Multivariate logistic data regression analysis identified predictors of memory performance from: reader, set, time since last read, presence of cancer, and whether the case was called back at the last read. Results Memory performance differed markedly between readers and reader identity was a highly significant predictor of memory performance. Presence of cancer was not a significant predictor of memory performance (odds ratio 0.77, 95% CI : 0.49–1.21). Whether the case was called back at the last read was a highly significant predictor (odds ratio 4.22, 95% CI : 2.70–6.61) for the model incorporating reader variability, and also the model without reader variability (odds ratio 2.67, 95% CI : 1.74–4.08). Conclusion The only statistically significant predictor of radiologist memory for a mammogram was whether the radiologist ‘called it back’ at a prior reading round. Presence of cancer on a mammogram did not make it memorable.

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