| Literature DB >> 31315578 |
Oghenekome A Gbinigie1, Igho J Onakpoya2, Georgia C Richards2, Elizabeth A Spencer2, Constantinos Koshiaris2, Niklas Bobrovitz2, Carl J Heneghan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The value of biomarkers for diagnosing bacterial infections in older outpatients is uncertain and limited official guidance exists for clinicians in this area. The aim of this review is to critically appraise and evaluate biomarkers for diagnosing bacterial infections in older adults (aged 65 years and above).Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial infections; older adults; Biomarkers; Diagnosis; Primary health care
Year: 2019 PMID: 31315578 PMCID: PMC6637629 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1205-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flow chart showing the process for identification of studies eligible for inclusion
Characteristics of included studies
| Author, year and country | Study Type | Study Setting | Number of participants | Age (Years) | Study Duration | Bacterial Infection(s) investigated | Reference test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caterino et al. (2015), USA [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | ED | 23 | 65 years and above | N/A | UTI | Urine culture |
| Caterino et al. (2004), USA [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | ED | 108 | 65–100 | N/A | Bacteraemia | Blood cultures |
| Cengiz et al. (2013), Turkey [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | Geriatrics clinics | 110 | 65–96 | N/A | Bacterial Infections | FBC, biochemical parameters, CRP, serum protein electrophoresis, urine examination and Chest X-ray. Further tests (e.g. blood/urine/sputum/wound cultures, abdominal USS, chest and/or abdominal CT, MRI) performed as needed. |
| Chou et al. (2016), Taiwan [ | Retrospective observational study of diagnostic accuracy | ED | 9862 | 65 years and above | N/A | Bacteraemia | Blood cultures |
| Ducharme et al., (2007), Canada [ | Prospective observational study of diagnostic accuracy | ED | 100 | 65 years and above | N/A | UTI | Urine culture |
| Dwolatzky et al. (2005), Israel [ | Prospective observational study of diagnostic accuracy | Medical Centre | 80 | 65–101 | N/A | Bacteraemia | Blood cultures |
| Evans et al. (1991), United Kingdom [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | Day Hospital | 50 | 65–93 | N/A | UTI | Mid-stream urine |
| Juthani-Mehta et al. (2007), USA [ | Cohort study | Five nursing homes | 101 | 65 years and above | 1 year | UTI | Positive urine culture and greater than 10 white blood cells/mm3 on urinalysis |
| Lai et al. (2010), Taiwan [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | ED | 262 | 65 years and above | N/A | Bacteraemia | Clinical infection and a positive blood culture |
| Potts et al. (1999), USA [ | Retrospective observational study of diagnostic accuracy | ED | 117 | 80 years and above | N/A | Cholecystitis, appendicitis and abscess | Surgical diagnosis |
| Wasserman et al. (1989), USA [ | Diagnostic accuracy study | ED | 221 | 70–99 | N/A | Bacterial infections | 1) Positive blood culture 2) Positive urine culture and pyuria 3) Positive sputum culture and infiltrate on Chest X-ray 4) Positive culture from a normally sterile site or from an abscess cavity. |
Abbreviations: CRP C-reactive protein, CT Computerised tomography, ESR Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging, N/A Not applicable, USS Ultrasound Scan, UTI Urinary Tract Infection
Fig. 2Risk of bias graph. Legend QUADAS-2 Risk of bias and applicability graph showing review authors’ judgements about each domain
Fig. 3Risk of bias summary. Legend - QUADAS-2 Risk of bias and applicability summary showing review authors’ judgements about each domain
Fig. 4Likelihood ratios and probability plot for diagnostic tests in diagnosing different bacterial infections. Legend – a–d show likelihood ratios and pre- and post-test probabilities for diagnostic tests in diagnosing different bacterial infections. When possible, age-specific estimates have been given. When not specified, the result applies to patients aged 65 years and above. The figures have been separated according to the type of bacterial infection under investigation. Positive and negative likelihood ratios with 95% confidence intervals are presented for each test. The black dot within the dumbbell plot represents the pre-test probability of infection (i.e. disease prevalence). The red dot represents the probability of the infection after a positive test, and the green dot represents the probability of infection after a negative test. c – Estimates derived from people aged 80 years and above. d – CRP > 4.355 mg/L and WBC > 8,500/mm3 derived from people aged 65 years and above. All other estimates derived from people aged 70 years and above