Structures systematic chest X-ray interpretation with standardized reporting and critical findings communication. Use when reading chest X-rays, creating radiology reports, or documenting CXR findings.
Structures systematic chest X-ray interpretation with standardized reporting and critical findings communication.
Chest radiographs are the most frequently performed imaging study worldwide, accounting for roughly 40% of all diagnostic imaging. Missed findings on chest X-rays—particularly pneumothoraces, widened mediastinum, subtle pneumonias, and early malignancies—remain a leading source of malpractice claims in radiology. The ACR Practice Parameter for the Performance of Chest Radiography mandates a systematic approach covering all visible anatomic structures, correlation with clinical history, and comparison with prior studies when available. A structured, reproducible reporting method reduces perceptual and cognitive errors and ensures compliance with Joint Commission requirements for timely critical result communication.
Variability in reporting style leads to ambiguity for referring physicians. Studies show that structured reports improve referring-clinician comprehension by over 30% compared to free-text narratives. This skill enforces the systematic checklist approach and standardized lexicon recommended by the Fleischner Society and ACR.
Evaluate image quality before interpretation begins.
| Factor | Acceptable | Suboptimal | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rotation | Spinous processes equidistant from medial clavicle ends | Rotated >1 cm | Note in report; re-image if clinical need |
| Inspiration | ≥10 posterior ribs visible above diaphragm (PA) | <8 ribs | Note "low lung volumes" as a limitation |
| Penetration | Thoracic spine barely visible through cardiac silhouette | Over/under-penetrated | Note technical limitation |
| Coverage | Both costophrenic angles and lung apices included | Clipped anatomy | Document excluded regions |
| Projection | PA preferred; AP noted if portable | AP magnifies heart | State projection; do not assess cardiomegaly on AP |
If the study is technically inadequate, state the limitation explicitly and recommend repeat imaging if clinically indicated.
Work through every anatomic region in a fixed order to prevent satisfaction-of-search errors.
A — Airway and Apparatus
B — Bones and Soft Tissues
C — Cardiac and Mediastinum
D — Diaphragm
E — Effusion and Extra-Pulmonary Spaces
F — Fields (Lung Parenchyma)
G — Gastric Bubble
H — Hilum
I — Impression Synthesis
Use Fleischner Society terminology for pulmonary nodules and the ACR standardized lexicon for chest radiographs.
| Size (solid) | Low Risk | High Risk |
|---|---|---|
| <6 mm | No routine follow-up | Optional 12-month CT |
| 6–8 mm | CT at 6–12 months | CT at 6–12 months, then 18–24 months |
| >8 mm | CT at 3 months, PET/CT, or biopsy | CT at 3 months, PET/CT, or biopsy |
Standardized descriptors:
Per Joint Commission NPSG.02.03.01 and ACR Practice Parameter:
| Finding | Communication Timeline | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Tension pneumothorax | Immediate (STAT) | Direct verbal to ordering/covering provider |
| Aortic dissection/rupture | Immediate (STAT) | Direct verbal |
| New large pleural effusion with mediastinal shift | Within 1 hour | Verbal + document in report |
| New pulmonary mass suspicious for malignancy | Within same day | Verbal or secure electronic |
| Unexpected free air | Immediate (STAT) | Direct verbal |
Documentation requirements: