Review of claustrophobia incidence in MRI: A service evaluation of current rates across a multi-centre service
Hudson, DM; Heales, C; Meertens, R
Date: 9 March 2022
Article
Journal
Radiography
Publisher
Elsevier / College of Radiographers
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Patient anxiety related to undergoing medical imaging procedures is common, with reported
incidence varying from 49-95% (1,2). The source of this may be related to particular aspects of the
procedure itself or anticipation of the significance of results (1–7). For Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(MRI) the most notable response is one of ...
Patient anxiety related to undergoing medical imaging procedures is common, with reported
incidence varying from 49-95% (1,2). The source of this may be related to particular aspects of the
procedure itself or anticipation of the significance of results (1–7). For Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(MRI) the most notable response is one of claustrophobia due to the enclosing nature of the
scanning equipment, along with scanning noise, duration and lying flat(8–10). A range of responses
are reported, from awareness of discomfort to extreme panic(11), with heightened anxiety reported
in 29-56% of patients (1,2,12) and up to 3.4 times more likely when compared to undergoing an
ultrasound scan(1). This impacts patient outcomes; movement or reduced scan times may reduce
scan quality (13–16) through to inability to tolerate or even attempt a scan(15,17–19). This then has
financial and operational impacts on scanning units(13,19–21).
Meta-analysis has shown an incidence of 0.46-5.29% premature termination rate in MRI (summed
effect 1.8%) with the potential for this to drop below 1% as scanner design improves (22). Indeed, it
has been argued that as new designs and technological enhancements become commonplace, the
need to consider claustrophobia related anxiety in MRI will be removed(23). Scanners are becoming
more patient friendly by design, coupled with developments that reduce scan acquisition
times(21,24–26).
However, studies have shown that as of 2017 in the UK over 50% of scanners were still traditional
narrow bore (60cm) systems(27) and there has been no change in the percentage of scanners in
practice over 10years old since 2015(28). As a consequence, it seems improbable that incidence of
premature scan termination due to claustrophobia will show significant reduction whilst provision
across the UK is not currently making available the benefits of newer technology to improve patient
experience.
As well as the influence of scanning equipment, it would be advantageous to understand whether
any specific patient groups may be more prone to an anxious response to their scan experience. This
would enable services to tailor emotional support provided, an important element of personcentred care(29). Being able to offer reasonable adjustment for patients goes some way to
addressing potential inequalities, where all patients should be appropriately supported to achieve
the scan and diagnosis needed to inform their care.
Therefore, the aim of this evaluation was to provide a current view on the incidence of scan related
anxiety, defined as failure to scan due to claustrophobia, drawing on operational data alone.
Institute of Health Research
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2022 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The College of Radiographers. This version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/