| Literature DB >> 35015190 |
Alla Melman1, Chris G Maher2, Chris Needs3, Gustavo C Machado2.
Abstract
To determine the proportion of patients admitted to the hospital for back pain who have nonserious back pain, serious spinal, or serious other pathology as their final diagnosis. The proportion of nonserious back pain admissions will be used to plan for future 'virtual hospital' admissions. Electronic medical record data between January 2016 and September 2020 from three emergency departments (ED) in Sydney, Australia were used to identify inpatient admissions. SNOMED-CT-AU diagnostic codes were used to select ED patients aged 18 and older with an admitting diagnosis related to nonserious back pain. The inpatient discharge diagnosis was determined from the primary ICD-10-AM codes by two independent clinician-researchers. Inpatient admissions were then analysed by sociodemographic and hospital admission variables. A total of 38.1% of patients admitted with a provisional diagnosis of nonserious back pain were subsequently diagnosed with a specific pathology likely unsuitable for virtual care; 14.2% with a serious spinal pathology (e.g., fracture and infection) and 23.9% a serious pathology beyond the lumbar spine (e.g., pathological fracture and neoplasm). A total of 57% of admissions were identified as nonserious back pain, likely suitable for virtual care. A challenge for implementing virtual care in this setting is screening for patients with serious pathology. Protocols need to be developed to reduce the risk of patients being admitted to virtual hospitals with serious pathology as the cause of their back pain. Key Points • Among admitted patients provisionally diagnosed in ED with non-serious back pain, 38.1% were found to have 'serious spinal pathologies' or 'serious pathologies beyond the lumbar spine' at discharge. • Spinal fractures were the most common serious spinal pathology, accounting for 9% of all provisional 'non-serious back pain' admissions from ED. • 57% of back pain admissions were confirmed to be non-serious back pain and may be suitable to virtual hospital care; the challenge is discriminating these patients from those with serious pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Back pain; Nonserious back pain; Spinal; Spinal pathology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35015190 PMCID: PMC9119888 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-022-06054-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 3.650
Prevalence of discharge diagnostic categories in patients admitted with a provisional diagnosis of nonserious back pain, by age group
| Back pain category | Total ( | Age < 65 ( | Age ≥ 65 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nonspecific back pain, | 543 (27.4) | 209 (29.5) | 334 (26.2) | |
| Radicular back pain, | 586 (29.6) | 257 (36.3) | 329 (25.8) | |
| Serious spinal pathology, | Fracture | 172 (8.7) | 75 (10.6) | 206 (16.2) |
| Infection | 42 (2.1) | |||
| Cauda equina, myelopathy, spinal cord compression/injury | 20 (1.0) | |||
| Postsurgical or procedural complication | 15 (0.8) | |||
| Inflammatory spondylopathy | 13 (0.7) | |||
| Osteoporotic fracture | 7 (0.4) | |||
| Dislocation of thoracolumbar vertebrae | 6 (0.3) | |||
| Neurological condition | 4 (0.2) | |||
| Neoplasm | 2 (0.1) | |||
| Total | 281 (14.2) | |||
| Serious pathology beyond lumbar spine, | Pathological fracture | 145 (7.3) | 134 (18.9) | 339 (26.6) |
| Infection | 86 (4.3) | |||
| Neoplasm | 56 (2.8) | |||
| Trauma (contusion, wound, or fracture) | 40 (2.0) | |||
| Neurological condition | 28 (1.4) | |||
| Cardiovascular condition | 23 (1.2) | |||
| Gastroenterological condition | 23 (1.2) | |||
| Metabolic disorder | 12 (0.6) | |||
| Urological condition | 12 (0.6) | |||
| Delirium or dementia | 11 (0.6) | |||
| Myeloma | 9 (0.5) | |||
| Inflammatory arthropathy | 7 (0.4) | |||
| Gynaecological condition | 7 (0.4) | |||
| Lymphoma | 7 (0.4) | |||
| Leukemia | 4 (0.2) | |||
| Respiratory condition | 3 (0.2) | |||
| Total | 473 (23.9) | |||
| Other musculoskeletal condition (non-serious, non-lumbar), | 99 (5.0) | 33 (4.7) | 66 (5.2) | |
Characteristics of admitted patients likely suitable (nonserious back pain) and likely unsuitable (serious spinal or non-lumbar pathology) for virtual hospital care
| Characteristics | Total, | Nonserious back pain, | Serious spinal or non-lumbar pathology, |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, median [IQR] | 73 [56–83] | 70 [51–82] | 76 [63–84] |
| Female sex, | 1189 (60.0) | 463 (41.0) | 330 (38.7) |
| Socioeconomic indexes for areas, | |||
| 510 (26.1) | 296 (26.6) | 214 (25.5) | |
| 1442 (73.9) | 815 (73.4) | 627 (74.6) | |
| ED arrival by ambulance, | 1235 (62.3) | 695 (61.6) | 540 (63.3) |
| #ED triage category, | |||
| 2 | 63 (3.2) | 34 (3.0) | 29 (3.4) |
| 3 | 1060 (53.5) | 601 (53.2) | 459 (53.8) |
| 4 | 850 (42.9) | 489 (43.3) | 361 (42.3) |
| 5 | 9 (0.5) | 5 (0.4) | 4 (0.5) |
| ED length of stay (hours), median [IQR] | 6 [4–8] | 5 [4–7] | 6 [4–8] |
| Inpatient length of stay (days), median [IQR] | 6 [3–12] | 4 [2–8] | 8 [4–16] |
ED Triage categories: 2: Imminently life-threatening; 3: potentially life-threatening or important time-critical treatment or severe pain; 4: potentially life-serious or situational urgency or significant complexity; 5: less urgent