| Literature DB >> 26024532 |
Evelien de Vos-Kerkhof1, Ruud G Nijman1, Yvonne Vergouwe2, Suzanne Polinder3, Ewout W Steyerberg2, Johan van der Lei4, Henriëtte A Moll1, Rianne Oostenbrink1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess the impact of a clinical decision model for febrile children at risk for serious bacterial infections (SBI) attending the emergency department (ED).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26024532 PMCID: PMC4449197 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Patient characteristics.
| Intervention | Usual care | |
|---|---|---|
| (n = 219) | (n = 220) | |
|
| ||
| Age (years) | 2.0 (1.0–4.2) | 1.7 (0.8–3.9) |
| Sex, male | 140 (63.9) | 145 (65.9) |
| Temperature | 38.9 (38.2–39.5) | 38.9 (38.0–39.5) |
| Duration fever | 2.0 (1.0–4.0) | 2.0 (1.0–4.0) |
| Prolonged capillary refill | 18 (8.2) | 26 (11.8) |
| Chest wall retractions | 10 (4.6) | 16 (7.3) |
| Ill appearance | 44 (20.1) | 49 (22.3) |
| Saturation (<94% O2) | 3 (1.4) | 4 (1.8) |
| Respiratory rate | 28.0 (24.0–40.0) | 32.0 (24.0–39.0) |
| Heart rate | 135.0 (120.0–160.0) | 140.0 (120.0–156.0) |
| CRP | 12.0 (8.0–39.0) | 13.0 (7.0–35.8) |
|
| ||
| Self-referral | 120 (54.8) | 115 (52.3) |
| Primary care | 57 (26.0) | 67 (30.5) |
| Ambulance | 21 (9.6) | 17 (7.7) |
| Other | 20 (9.1) | 20 (9.1) |
| Missing | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) |
|
| ||
| Urgent | 181 (82.6) | 193 (87.7) |
| Non-urgent | 35 (16.0) | 26 (11.8) |
| Missing | 3 (1.4) | 1 (0.5) |
|
| ||
| Serious bacterial infections | 27 (12.3) | 28 (12.7) |
| Sepsis | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) |
| Pneumonia | 19 (8.7) | 14 (6.4) |
| Urinary tract infection | 5 (2.3) | 9 (4.1) |
| Bacterial gastroenteritis | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) |
| Pulmonary tuberculosis) | 1 (0.5) | - |
| Abscess | - | 2 (0.9) |
| Scarlatina | - | 1 (0.5) |
| Self-limiting/ viral diseases | 192 (87.7) | 192 (87.3) |
| Upper respiratory tract infection | 109 (49.8) | 116 (52.7) |
| Lower respiratory tract infection | 14 (6.4) | 15 (6.8) |
| Gastroenteritis | 20 (9.1) | 18 (8.2) |
| Others | 49 (22.4) | 43 (19.5) |
* Absolute number (percentage).
a Median (25–75 percentiles).
# ‘Other’ includes secondary care and after telephone contact.
Urgent’ includes very urgent/ urgent; ‘Non-urgent’ includes standard/ non-urgent.
^^ Others includes for example. Influenza, chicken-pox, stomatitis.
Fig 1Clinical decision model.
Clinical decision model with its predictors (above) and recommendations (below).
Fig 2Flowchart patient selection and randomization.
Flowchart patient selection and Randomization.
Fig 3Calibration plot for the risk of pneumonia (left) and other SBI (right).
Calibration plot of the predicted risks of pneumonia and other SBI (x-axis) and the observed frequencies of pneumonia and other SBI (with 95% CI, y-axis). The triangles represent the mean (predicted vs. observed) risk estimates of pneumonia and other SBI by quintiles of predicted risk. The dashed diagonal line represents ideal calibration. The distribution of the predicted risks of patients with pneumonia (n = 33) and other SBI (n = 22) and other patients (n = 406 and n = 417) is shown in the bottom of the graph, parallel to the x-axis.
Patient and process outcome.
| Intervention group | Usual care group | |
|---|---|---|
| (n = 219) | (n = 220) | |
|
| ||
| False positive (no pneumonia/ chest-radiography performed) | 25/42 (60%) | 16/28 (57%) |
| Sensitivity to detect pneumonia | 0.89 (0.69–0.97) | 0.86 (0.60–0.96) |
| Positive likelihood ratio | 7.16 (4.81–10.66) | 11.0 (6.58–18.81) |
| False negative (pneumonia/no chest-radiography performed) | 2/177 (1%) | 2/192 (1%) |
| Specificity to detect pneumonia | 0.88 (0.82–0.91) | 0.92 (0.88–0.95) |
| Negative likelihood ratio | 0.12 (0.03–0.45) | 0.16 (0.04–0.56) |
|
| ||
| False positive (no UTI/ urine-culture performed) | 12/18 (67%) | 9/17 (53%) |
| Sensitivity to detect UTI | 1.0 (0.61–1.0) | 0.89 (0.57–0.98) |
| Positive likelihood ratio | 17.7 (10.2–30.7) | 20.8 (10.6–41.1) |
| False negative (UTI/ no urine-culture performed) | 0/201 (0%) | 1/203 (0.5%) |
| Specificity to detect UTI | 0.94 (0.90–0.97) | 0.96 (0.92–0.98) |
| Negative likelihood ratio | - | 0.12 (0.02–0.74) |
|
| ||
| 1. Patient consultation time | ||
| Time spent at the ED (hrs:min) | 1:57 (1:24–2:38) | 1:54 (1:21–2:42) |
| 2. Diagnostics | ||
| Chest-radiography | 42 (19.2) | 28 (12.7) |
| Urine-dipstick | 156 | 133 |
| Urine-culture | 18 (8.2) | 17 (7.7) |
| Full blood-count | 31 | 48 |
| Blood culture | 13 (5.9) | 20 (9.1) |
| Other cultures | 20 (9.1) | 25 (11.4) |
| Overall | 124 (56.6) | 138 (62.7) |
| 3. Treatment | ||
| Antibiotics at the ED (iv) | 9 (4.1) | 14 (6.4) |
| Antibiotics at discharge (oral) | 69 (31.5) | 78 (35.5) |
| SBIreceiving antibiotics / SBItotal | 25/27 (92.6) | 26/28 (92.9) |
| no SBIreceiving antibiotics / no SBItotal | 44/192 (22.9) | 52/192 (27.1) |
| 4. Follow-up | ||
| No | 124 (56.6) | 137 (62.3) |
| Hospitalization | 26 (11.9) | 23 (10.5) |
| Outpatient clinic | 22 (10.0) | 27 (12.3) |
| Telephone call | 47 (21.5) | 33 (15.0) |
| 5. Safety netting | ||
| Revisit | 47 (21.5) | 45 (20.5) |
| Antibiotics after revisit | 12 (5.5) | 8 (3.6) |
| Hospitalization | 7 (3.2) | 5 (2.3) |
SBI = serious bacterial infection.
UTI = urinary tract infection.
a Median (25–75 percentiles).
# including hemoglobin, leukocyte, thrombocyte and differential count.
~including feces culture, nasal swab, throat culture and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture.
*Chi-square, p-value <0.05.
± Overall diagnostics minus urine-dipstick analysis.
$1 In 17 of 19 children with pneumonia chest-radiography was performed.
$2 In 12 of 14 children with pneumonia chest-radiography was performed.
$3 In 175 of 200 children without pneumonia no chest-radiography was performed.
$4 In 190 of 206 children without pneumonia no chest-radiography was performed.
$5 In 6 of 6 children with UTI a urine-culture was performed.
$6 In 8 of 9 children with UTI a urine-culture was performed.
$7 In 201 of 213 children without UTI no urine-culture was performed.
$8 In 202 of 211 children without UTI no urine-culture was performed.