Ten Steps to Writing an
Effective Case Report
A Case Report is a detailed report of the symptoms, signs,
diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of a patient. Case Reports
may contain a demographic profile of the patient but usually
describes an unusual or novel occurrence.
An unexpected association between diseases or symptoms
An unexpected event in the course of observing or treating a
patient
Findings that shed new light on the possible pathogenesis
of a disease or an adverse effect
Unique or rare features of a disease
Unique therapeutic approaches
A positional or quantitative variation of the anatomical
structures
Journal selection should be based on the type of your Case Report.
Example,
Unusual injury presentations are more likely to be accepted in
journals such as Trauma, rather than more mainstream,
general-interest journals such as British Medical Journal; this does not publish Case Reports but only Lesson of the Week.
Another important point with respect to journal selection is that it is extremely important to follow the basic format
required by the journal. Your Case Report may be rejected
because it does not conform to the standard format, no matter
how good the content is. Therefore, formatting such as
margins, spacing, figure numbering, and style of references
(Vancouver, Harvard, etc.), all are important aspects.
A suggested outline of sections for a Case Report is listed below.
Abstract/Summary
Case Presentation
o Patient’s Examination/Identification
o Medical History
o Analysis of test results
o Appropriate plan and analysis
o Support for conditions considered
o Support for additional investigations
Pathophysiology
Treatment/Patient Management
Discussion
o Etiology
o Epidemiology
o Prevalence
o Complications
o Prognosis
o Ethical
Dilemmas (if any)
o Conclusion
So, how do you begin?
A Case Report is a way of communicating information to the
medical world about a rare or unreported feature, condition,
complication, or intervention by publishing it in a medical
journal. Decide whether your Case Report is publishable. This
can be decided based on the following criteria:
Describe rare, perplexing, or novel diagnostic features of a
diseased state?
Report therapeutic challenges, controversies, or dilemmas?
Describe a new surgical procedure?
Report how a drug can enhance a surgical procedure?
Report new medical errors or medication errors?
Describe rare or novel adverse drug reactions?
Describe a therapeutic failure or a lack of therapeutic
efficacy?
You should also ensure that you adhere to the following points:
Do an extensive literature search—PubMed, Medline,
Ovid, Embase, and even search engines like Google will
give you a vast amount of information related to your
topic.
Narrow down the search to your actual topic
If this comes up with very few search results, it means
(assuming your search method is correct) that the case is
rare, and the report is therefore more likely to be
published.
Use the patient’s notes to record the details of all the events in the patient’s care—that is, history, examination
findings, results of investigations with dates, and operative
findings, if any, together with the details of the actual
interventions and follow-ups.
Use copies—do not take the originals of radiographs,
photographs, etc. (they are the patient’s only records for
future reference).
Verify all patient data such as history and dates of
examination with the patient again and make sure you
have got the facts right.
Summarize the information that you have gathered:
A brief history and important and relevant positive and
negative findings with details of investigations
Treatment
The condition of the patient after treatment
A common form of presentation is to divide the content into a
textbook style of presentation without the headings—history,
examination, investigation, treatment, and outcome in
separate paragraphs.
Follow the rule of brevity!
State the issue and its significance. You can also cite some
articles that have already referred to this problem.
Do not forget to mention how rare the condition is.
Since a Case Report is usually about a single or a group of
patients, this section plays a very important role. Patient
consent is a very crucial point and should compulsorily be
mentioned. Obtaining consent from the patient is not only a
good medical practice but also mandatory for most journals,
such as BMJ (which has its own consent form on the journal’s
The case is usually described in chronological order.
Provide the results of the relevant examinations and laboratory
tests, usually only those with positive results.
These sections are written differently from those in other types of
research articles.
Proceed point-by-point when writing the Discussion:
First, explain the objective of reporting the case.
Describe what others have written before about the condition
or any related feature.
Be generous in quoting literature but do not include unnecessary
details.
The most important point to note is that your reviewers
want proof of the rarity of the condition and the scientific
explanations for it.
Example,
Answer these questions in the Discussion section:
Describe the cause of the condition or why a particular
procedure or feature was chosen.
How did it influence the outcome?
How does it differ from usual and what are your recommendations?
Are there any lessons to be learnt?
The Conclusion is not always necessary in a Case Report, but if it is, summarize in a few sentences.
The reference section is extremely important. Adhere to the style (Vancouver, Harvard, etc.) that your journal requires. Also,
as mentioned previously, the formatting will affect the acceptance of your report to a great extent. Therefore, take
care of all formatting instructions related to margins, spacing, figure numbering, and the type of English.
Content should be brief and less than 3 paragraphs:
State the purpose of the case report
Provide background information and pertinent definitions
Introduce the patient’s case
Ensure that the patient’s case presentation provides enough
detail for the reader to establish the case’s validity:
Patient demographics (age, sex, height, weight, etc.)—
avoid patient identifiers (date of birth, initials)
Patient’s complaints
Patient’s present illness and medical/family/social/medication
history before admission
Each drug’s name, strength, dosage form, route, and dates of
administration
The completed diagnostic procedures that are pertinent and support the case and their salient results.
Photographs of histopathology, roentgenograms,
electrocardiograms, skin manifestations, or anatomy
Patient consent and adherence to institutional guidelines
Justify the uniqueness of the case in this section:
Compare and contrast the nuances of the case report with the
literature review
List the limitations of the case report and describe their
relevance
Confirm the accuracy of the descriptive patient case report
Summarize the salient features of the case report
Draw recommendations and conclusions
This section should be brief and not exceed one paragraph:
Provide a justified conclusion
Provide evidence-based recommendations
List opportunities for research
We hope you find the information valuable while writing your Case
Report.
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Published:
Apr 2024
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