Writing a Case Report: A Work of Art
Editorial
Writing a Case Report: A Work of Art
Christian Ortega-Loubon,1 Ricardo Correa-Márquez.2
Case reports are a time-honored, important, integral, accepted work, firmly established within the medical literature, and
represent a growing importance of valuable clinical medical
information.1 Parkinson´s disease, and Kaposi´s Sarcoma are
only two examples of famous diseases first described in the
case report format, making us acknowledge the value of case
reports to the scientific literature. Case reports are valuable
resources of new and unusual information that may lead to
vital research and advances in clinical practice that improve
patient outcomes.
Despite the fact that it lies at the bottom of the evidence based
classification, the value and contribution of case reports to the
advancement of medicine is huge. This will continue in the future. There are 190.703 citations with the term of “case report”
up until November 2012 in PubMed database, and in 1 year
the number grew to 200.737 (PubMed, Available from: http://
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed, cited 2013 November 30). This
means that in only 1 year there are more than 10.000 case reports published in the database. This huge number of citations
shows that case reports have contributed a big proportion of
medical literature and grow rapidly over time.2
About the Author: Christian Ortega-Loubon is a
MD and Master of Higher
Education from the University of Panama. Resident of Cardiovascular
Surgery at the University
Clinic Hospital of Valladolid, Spain. He wrote a book
of Case Reports, which has
served as a guide to medical students in Latin America. Has lectured several
times on how to present
a case report, author and
reviewer of case reports
in several international
journals.
This is because published case reports provide essential information for optimal patient care because they can describe
important scientific observations that are missed or undetected in clinical trials, and provide individual clinical insights
thus expanding our knowledge base and giving birth to new
research lines. Information strays from the classical textbook
case, leading to a better and safer patient care.
The reason is that the human being has many features that
make it wonderful: it has a complex anatomy and physiology,
communication skills, intelligence, imagination, emotion, and
most surprising is the fact that each of us is unique, as a product of a harmonious genetic and environmental interaction.
Doctors treat patients, not diseases.3
The act of recording, discussion with colleagues, and publishing our clinical observations with patients remains essential
to the art of medicine and patient care. As Osler once said
“Always note and record the unusual...Publish it. Place it on
permanent record as a short, concise note. Such communications are always of value.”4
Few if any have had formal training on what constitutes a good
1
2
case report and how to write one. Unlike many other aspects
of our medical training, that of writing case reports is not standardized. There is a wide body of published literature on how
to construct a case report, including the different sections of a
case report and when to write one, but different journals have
different criteria and case report quality can be variable. We
made an effort trying to accomplish this by writing the book
"Case Reports: Semiology and Publication" (in spanish: Casos
Clínicos: Semiología y Publicación), looking for standardize the
form of how to make, present at a medical congress, and even
publish a case report.
There are guidelines for different publication types: randomized
controlled trials (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials, or
CONSORT), observational studies (Strengthening the Reporting
of Observational studies in Epidemiology, or STROBE), and systematic reviews and meta-analyses (Preferred Reporting Items
for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses, or PRISMA); guidelines have also been developed for adverse-event case reports, and all authors should be familiar with the Committee
on Publication Ethics (COPE) and the Enhancing the Quality and
Transparency of Health Research (EQUATOR) Network. But, it
was not until September 2013, that an international reporting
guideline for case reports (CARE) was presented. It will provide an international, general, non-journal-specific framework
for completeness and transparency for published case reports,
striking a balance between adequate detail and concise writing
that can be used by all authors for all journals that publish
case reports.5
The CARE guidelines consists of a checklist that comprises 13
primary items to include when writing a case report: title, key
words, abstract, introduction, patient information, clinical findings, timeline, diagnostic assessment, therapeutic interventions, follow-up and outcomes, discussion, patient perspective,
and informed consent (CARE Guidelines, Available from: http://
www.care-statement.org/care-checklist.html, cited 2014 July
30).
Every case report is divided into five sections: abstract, introduction, case presentation, discussion and conclusion. The
abstract briefly summarizes the case and its clinical relevance.
It should clearly state the subject and educational value of
the case report to introduce the readers to the central theme
of the article. Writing the abstract is easy after the whole text
is written. It is important because it gives information about
Department of Cardiac Sugery, University Clinic Hospital of Valladolid, Valladolid, Spain.
National Institute of Health. USA.
Correspondence:
Christian Ortega Loubon
Address: Av Ramón y Cajal, 3, 47005 Valladolid, Spain.
Email:
Int J Med Students • 2014 | Jul-Oct | Vol 2 | Issue 3
The International Journal of Medical Students
90
IJMS
International Journal of
Editorial
M e dical S
St
t u dents
Ortega-Loubon C, et al.
Writing a Case Report: A Work of Art
what the article is about, and its availability will allow for
easier retrieval from electronic database and help researchers
discern their level of interest in the manuscript. The Introduction should be concise and immediately attract the attention
and interest of the reader. It should provide the important information of the case report, background, epidemiologic data
and novelty of the case report. In this section, make the case
worthy to be published to the readers of the journal.
The case presentation should describe the patient’s story in
chronological order and in enough detail for the reader to establish his or her own conclusions about the case’s validity.
It should include information that pertains to the case with
a clinical teaching point, and avoid confusing, irrelevant and
superfluous data. The patient demographics such as age, sex
and race must be included.
The discussion section is the most important section of the
case report. It is the selling point that makes the article worth
publishing. It should evaluate the patient’s case for accuracy,
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