# Structured reporting enhances diagnostic quality in periapical dental radiographs: a comparative evaluation

**Authors:** Moritz Ludwig Schnitzer, Anna-Lisa Forster, Gloria Biechele, Felix L. Herr, Christian Dascalescu, Maurice Heimer, Ricarda Ebner, Viktoria Fusch, Matthias Frank Frölich, Tobias Graf, Johannes Rübenthaler, Thomas Geyer

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fdmed.2025.1695707 · Frontiers in Dental Medicine · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

Structured reporting improves the quality and clarity of dental radiology reports compared to traditional narrative reports.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that structured reporting enhances report quality in dental radiology without compromising therapeutic decision-making.

## Key findings

- Structured reports scored significantly higher in completeness, clarity, and quality.
- No significant difference was found in therapeutic decision-making between the two report types.
- Structured reports offer advantages for communication and integration with clinical systems.

## Abstract

Radiological reports are critical for accurate diagnosis and therapeutic decision-making. While narrative free-text reports remain the conventional standard in dental radiology, structured reporting has emerged as a promising approach to enhance report quality, consistency, and clinical relevance. This study aims to assess whether structured reporting provides measurable advantages over traditional narrative reports in the interpretation of dental radiographs.

A total of 50 randomly selected narrative reports of intraoral dental radiographs were retrospectively analyzed. Using a standardized template, corresponding structured reports were created for each case. Two independent dentists evaluated the reports using a detailed questionnaire, comparing both formats across nine parameters: therapeutic decision-making, completeness, information extraction, level of detail, logical sequence, trustworthiness, linguistic quality, clarity, and overall assessment.

Structured reports showed significantly higher ratings in terms of completeness, information extraction, detail, trust, linguistic quality, clarity, and overall evaluation (p < 0.001). No significant differences were observed between structured and narrative reports regarding therapeutic decision-making or the sufficiency of information for treatment planning.

Structured reporting in dental radiology demonstrates clear benefits in report clarity, quality, and interpretive utility. Although its impact on clinical decision-making may be equivalent to narrative reports, its consistent structure offers valuable advantages for communication, documentation, and future integration with clinical decision support systems.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819745/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819745