You’re playing catch in a casually maintained field. The ball lands in a patch of clover a few feet away. As you reach down to pick it up, you note a sprig with four leaves. You pluck it. Then, as you stand to announce your good fortune to your throwing partner, the four-leaf clover slips from your fingers and back into the mob of its three-leaf brethren. You start looking for it. Your friend asks: What’s the holdup? You pick up the ball, toss it back, and move on, leaving the lucky charm behind.
When doctors review X-rays or CT scans to look for a specific issue like a broken bone or pneumonia, they often don’t have time to look for unrelated medical “four-leaf clovers”: findings that might show up if diagnosticians hunted for surprises that are known as “Incidental findings.”
If experts happen to see unexpected results when they are looking for something else, they can save lives.
In the past, there haven’t been good ways to hunt down these incidental findings. Now, the Denver-based health-technology firm Eon is trying to solve the puzzle of incidental findings. With help and investment from UCHealth, they’ve built a system that integrates into UCHealth’s Epic electronic health record (EHR), the engine behind the My Health Connection patient portal and much more.