tracking-incidental-findings

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Manages incidental finding follow-up using ACR White Paper recommendations. Use when tracking incidentalomas, scheduling follow-up imaging, or managing unexpected findings.

CaseMark By CaseMark schedule Updated 4/20/2026

name: tracking-incidental-findings language: en description: Manages incidental finding follow-up using ACR White Paper recommendations. Use when tracking incidentalomas, scheduling follow-up imaging, or managing unexpected findings. tags:

  • monitoring
  • radiology metadata: author: casemark practice_areas:
    • Radiology
    • Diagnostic Imaging document_types:
    • Tracking Report skill_modes:
    • Monitoring

Tracking Incidental Findings

Manages incidental finding follow-up using ACR White Paper recommendations.

Why This Skill Exists

Incidental findings — abnormalities discovered on imaging performed for an unrelated indication — occur in up to 40% of CT scans. The ACR Incidental Findings Committee has published organ-specific white papers providing evidence-based management algorithms for adrenal, renal, hepatic, pancreatic, splenic, and thyroid incidentalomas. Without structured tracking, incidental findings are lost to follow-up at alarming rates: studies show 30–70% of incidental findings with recommended follow-up never receive it. Lost follow-up exposes patients to delayed cancer diagnosis and represents a major medicolegal liability for radiologists and referring providers.

The Joint Commission and CMS Conditions of Participation require systems for critical result communication, and many institutions extend this to actionable incidental findings. ACR accreditation standards expect that radiology reports include specific, evidence-based follow-up recommendations for incidentalomas rather than vague "clinical correlation" statements. This skill provides the systematic framework for categorizing, recommending, tracking, and closing the loop on incidental findings.


Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

  1. What organ/structure is the incidental finding in? (Default: Identify from imaging report)
  2. What is the size of the finding? (Default: Measure from imaging; record in mm)
  3. What imaging modality detected the finding? (Default: CT — specify if MRI, US, or other)
  4. Was contrast administered? (Default: Yes — impacts characterization ability)
  5. Does the patient have relevant risk factors? (Default: No known malignancy, cirrhosis, or endocrine disorder)
  6. Are prior studies available showing this finding? (Default: No — first identification)
  7. What was the original clinical indication for the study? (Default: Document the primary reason)
  8. Is there an institutional incidental-findings tracking system? (Default: Verify with department)

Documents to Request

  • Original imaging study and report identifying the finding
  • Prior imaging (any modality) for comparison
  • Patient medical history, especially cancer history and risk factors
  • Lab values (TSH for thyroid, catecholamines for adrenal, AFP for liver, eGFR for renal)
  • Institutional incidental-findings policy and tracking-system workflow
  • ACR Incidental Findings Committee white papers (organ-specific)

Step 1: Categorize the Incidental Finding

ACR Incidental Findings — Organ-Specific Decision Matrix

Organ Finding Type Key Characterization Features Primary Reference
Adrenal Nodule Size, attenuation (HU on non-con CT), washout characteristics ACR Adrenal White Paper 2017
Kidney Cystic mass Bosniak v2019 classification (septations, enhancement, wall features) ACR Renal White Paper 2017
Kidney Solid mass Size, enhancement pattern ACR Renal White Paper 2017
Liver Hepatic lesion Patient population (cirrhosis vs. no), enhancement pattern, size ACR Liver White Paper 2017
Pancreas Cystic lesion Size, duct communication, mural nodularity, main duct dilatation ACR Pancreas White Paper 2017
Thyroid Nodule on CT/MRI Size, suspicious features (calcification, invasion) ACR Thyroid White Paper 2015
Spleen Lesion Homogeneity, enhancement, number ACR Spleen White Paper 2017
Lung Nodule (non-screening) Size, morphology, patient risk factors Fleischner Society 2017

Step 2: Apply Size- and Feature-Based Management Algorithms

Adrenal Incidentaloma

Size Attenuation Recommendation
≤1 cm Any Benign; no follow-up required
1–4 cm ≤10 HU on non-contrast CT Lipid-rich adenoma; no follow-up
1–4 cm >10 HU Adrenal CT washout protocol or chemical-shift MRI
>4 cm Any Surgical consultation (concern for adrenal carcinoma/pheochromocytoma)
Any Suspicious features (heterogeneous, hemorrhage, invasion) Urgent surgical referral

Adrenal washout criteria: Absolute washout >60% or relative washout >40% at 15-minute delay = adenoma.

Renal Incidentaloma — Bosniak v2019

Bosniak Class Features Management
I Simple cyst: thin wall, no septa, no enhancement No follow-up
II Few thin septa, fine calcification, hyperdense (≤3 cm, homogeneous, non-enhancing) No follow-up
IIF Minimal thickening, many septa, thick calcification Follow-up: 6, 12, 24 months
III Thickened irregular septa or wall, measurable enhancement Surgical or active surveillance
IV Enhancing soft-tissue component Surgical management

Pancreatic Cystic Lesion

Size Features Recommendation
<1.5 cm No worrisome features No follow-up or MRI in 2 years (varies by institution)
1.5–2.5 cm No worrisome features MRI in 1 year, then extend interval
>2.5 cm No worrisome features MRI/EUS, consider multidisciplinary discussion
Any Mural nodule, main duct >5 mm, solid component EUS with FNA; surgical consultation

Thyroid Incidentaloma on CT/MRI

Finding Recommendation
≤1.0 cm, no suspicious features No further workup in most patients
>1.0 cm without suspicious features Thyroid US recommended
>1.5 cm Thyroid US recommended
Any size with suspicious features (calcification, lymphadenopathy, invasion) Thyroid US + possible FNA
Known thyroid cancer history Thyroid US regardless of size

Step 3: Document the Finding in the Report

Every incidental finding report entry must include:

  1. Finding identifier — organ, location, unique descriptor
  2. Size — measured in standard axis for the organ system
  3. Characterization — imaging features used for classification
  4. Classification — ACR white paper category or Fleischner tier
  5. Recommendation — specific modality, timing, and contrast requirement
  6. Urgency — routine follow-up vs. expedited workup vs. urgent referral
  7. Communication — to whom the finding was communicated and when

Report Language Template

Incidental [size] [descriptor] [organ] [location].
Per ACR Incidental Findings Committee [organ] White Paper [year]:
Recommendation: [specific modality] in [timeframe].
[Communication documentation if required.]

Step 4: Tracking System Entry and Closure

Tracking Workflow

  1. Log entry — Record finding in institutional tracking system with unique case ID
  2. Referring provider notification — Document communication (name, date, time, method)
  3. Patient notification — Per institutional policy (letter, portal message, phone)
  4. Follow-up scheduling — Verify follow-up order is placed
  5. Follow-up completion — Confirm follow-up study was performed
  6. Disposition — Close the loop: resolved (benign), upgraded (further workup), stable (continue tracking)

Tracking Data Elements

Field Description
Patient MRN Unique patient identifier
Finding Organ, type, size, laterality
Detection date Date of original study
ACR category Classification per white paper
Recommended follow-up Modality + timeframe
Due date Calculated from detection date + recommended interval
Ordering provider Name, NPI, contact
Communication date When provider was notified
Follow-up status Pending, scheduled, completed, lost, patient declined
Outcome Benign, malignant, indeterminate, still tracking

Step 5: Escalation and Lost-to-Follow-Up Protocol

Trigger Action
Follow-up overdue by 30 days Alert to ordering provider via EMR message
Follow-up overdue by 60 days Escalate to department quality lead
Follow-up overdue by 90 days Direct patient contact per institutional policy
Patient declines follow-up Document informed refusal; notify ordering provider
Finding upgraded on follow-up Expedited referral; update tracking status
Patient transferred care Forward tracking record to new provider

Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

  1. Is the correct ACR white paper applied for the organ and finding type?
  2. Does the recommendation include specific modality, timing, and contrast requirement?
  3. Is the communication to the referring provider documented with name, date, and time?
  4. Is the finding logged in the institutional tracking system with a due date?
  5. Are patient risk factors accounted for in the management recommendation?

Quality Audit

  • Finding is categorized per the correct ACR Incidental Findings white paper
  • Size is measured in the standard axis for the organ system
  • Characterization features (HU, enhancement, morphology) are documented
  • Management recommendation matches the ACR algorithm for the finding's size and features
  • Follow-up includes specific modality, timing, and contrast requirement
  • Referring provider is notified with documentation of name, date, time, method
  • Tracking system entry is created with all required data elements
  • Due date is calculated and recorded
  • Patient risk factors are assessed and factored into management
  • Prior studies are reviewed to determine if finding is new or stable
  • Report avoids vague language ("clinical correlation recommended") in favor of specific recommendations
  • Critical incidental findings (e.g., suspicious mass) trigger same-day communication
  • Lost-to-follow-up protocol is in place with defined escalation timeline
  • Finding closure is documented when follow-up is completed

Guidelines

  1. Every incidental finding must have a specific follow-up recommendation — "clinical correlation recommended" is never acceptable as the sole management plan.
  2. Apply the most current ACR Incidental Findings Committee white paper for the relevant organ system; do not use outdated criteria.
  3. Adrenal nodule characterization requires non-contrast HU or washout calculation; do not characterize on contrast-enhanced images alone unless washout is performed.
  4. Bosniak v2019 criteria differ from earlier versions — use the current classification and document the version applied.
  5. Institutions must have a closed-loop tracking system; if none exists, recommend implementation as a quality-improvement initiative.
  6. Risk factors change management — a thyroid incidentaloma in a patient with prior head/neck radiation or thyroid cancer history requires workup regardless of size.
  7. Document patient refusal of follow-up in the medical record and ensure the referring provider is aware.
  8. When multiple incidental findings coexist, each requires its own classification and tracking entry.
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/CaseMark/skills --skill tracking-incidental-findings
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