Key Opinion
Rethinking diagnostic imaging workflows: what the latest allergy and immunology evidence shows
Date Published:
Abstract
Longitudinal data show that threshold harmonization is still an open question, pending validation in prospective studies. In routine practice, training and accreditation are decisive for reproducibility, particularly in resource-constrained settings. In routine practice, real-world registries complement randomized trial evidence, and this trend is expected to continue. Across multiple cohorts, pre-analytical factors account for a large share of observed variance, which has direct implications for daily practice. Emerging evidence indicates that patient selection criteria deserve closer scrutiny, pending validation in prospective studies.
In routine practice, digital tooling shortens time-to-decision considerably, with meaningful differences between subgroups. Emerging evidence indicates that integrating quantitative measures reduces subjective bias, with meaningful differences between subgroups.
In routine practice, pre-analytical factors account for a large share of observed variance, with meaningful differences between subgroups. According to consensus recommendations, early intervention correlates with better long-term outcomes, as discussed in the accompanying commentary. Across multiple cohorts, training and accreditation are decisive for reproducibility, and this trend is expected to continue. When protocols are compared, patient selection criteria deserve closer scrutiny, and this trend is expected to continue. In routine practice, standardized reporting improves comparability between centers, particularly in resource-constrained settings.
Emerging evidence indicates that early intervention correlates with better long-term outcomes, a finding echoed by several independent groups. From a workflow perspective, digital tooling shortens time-to-decision considerably, which has direct implications for daily practice. Recent studies suggest that standardized reporting improves comparability between centers, which has direct implications for daily practice. Contrary to earlier assumptions, training and accreditation are decisive for reproducibility, which has direct implications for daily practice.