| Literature DB >> 35194653 |
Alessandro Gambacorta1, Marianna Moro2, Antonietta Curatola1, Federica Brancato1, Marcello Covino3, Antonio Chiaretti1, Antonio Gatto4.
Abstract
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of the PECARN Rule (PR) in reducing radiological investigations in children with mild traumatic head injury in comparison with current clinical practice. A retrospective study was performed in our hospital between July 2015 and June 2020. Data of all children < 18 years of age admitted to the emergency department (ED), within 24 h after a head trauma with GCS ≥ 14, were analyzed. PECARN Rule was retrospectively applied to all patients. In total, 3832 patients were enrolled, 2613 patients ≥ 2 years and 1219 < 2 years. In the group of children ≥ 2 years, 10 presented clinically important traumatic brain injury (ciTBI) and were hospitalized, 7/10 underwent neurosurgery, and 3/10 clinical observation in the pediatric ward for more than 48 h. In children < 2 years, only 3 patients presented ciTBI, 2 underwent neurosurgery and 1 hospitalized. Applying the PR, no patient with ciTBI would have been discharged without an accurate diagnosis and we would have avoided 139 CT scans in patients ≥ 2 years, and 23 in those < 2 years of age (29% less).Entities:
Keywords: Emergency department; Head injury; PECARN Rule; Pediatric; Personalized medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35194653 PMCID: PMC9056473 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-022-04424-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.860
Clinical and demographic characteristics of the study population
| Characteristics | Study cohort ( | < 2 years | ≥ 2 years |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5.3 (SD 4.8) | 0.99 years (IQR 0.63–1.39) | 6.01 (IQR 3.44–10.73) | |
| 2381 (65.13%) | 665 (54.6%) | 1716 (65.6%) | |
| 2.42 (IQR 1.15–3.78) | 2.43 (IQR 1.27–3.62) | 2.4 (IQR 1.30–3.83) | |
| 46 (1.2%) | 12 (0.98%) | 34 (1.3%) | |
47 (1.2%) 726 (19%) 3059 (79.8%) | 2 (0.17%) 203 (16.65%) 1014 (83.18%) | 45 (1.72%) 523 (20.02%) 2045 (78.26%) | |
1384 (36.1%) 419 (10.9%) 217 (5.7%) 774 (20.2%) 197 (5.1%) 1130 (29.5%) | 477 (39.1%) 126 (10.3%) 56 (4.6%) 151 (12.4%) 36 (3%) 441 (36.2%) | 907 (34.7%) 293 (11.2%) 161 (6.16%) 623 (23.8%) 161 (6.2%) 689 (26.4%) | |
586 (15.3%) 30 (0.8%) 3216 (83.9%) | 110 (9%) 8 (0.7%) 1101 (90.3%) | 476 (18.2%) 22 (0.8%) 2115 (81.0%) | |
1834 (47.9%) 331 (8.6%) 368 (9.6%) 198 (5.1%) 23 (0.6%) 643 (16.8%) 435 (11.4%) | 895 (73.4%) 46 (3.8%) 27 (2.2%) 0 0 135 (11.1%) 116 (9.5%) | 939 (35.9%) 285 (10.9%) 341 (13.1%) 198 (7.6%) 23 (0.9%) 508 (19.4%) 319 (12.2%) | |
3680 (96%) 152 (4%) | 1168 (95.8%) 51 (4.2%) | 2512 (96.1%) 101 (3.9%) | |
3281 (85.6%) 551 (14.4%) 89 (2.3%) | 1123 (92.1%) 96 (7.9%) 49 (4.0%) | 2158 (83.6%) 455 (17.4%) 40 (1.5%) | |
2/3281 (0.06%) 669/3281 (20.4%) 2610/3281 (79.54%) | 1/1123 (0.1%) 302/1123 (26.9%) 820/1123 (73.0%) | 1/2158 (0.05%) 367/2158 (17%) 1790/2158 (82.95%) | |
45/551 (8.1%) 342/551 (62.1%) 164/551 (29.8%) | 16/96 (16.7%) 56/96 (58.3%) 24/96 (25.0%) | 29/455 (6.4%) 286/455 (62.8%) 140/455 (30.8%) | |
13/89 (14.6%) 74/89 (83.2%) 2/89 (2.2%) | 8/49 (16.3%) 40/49 (81.7%) 1/49 (2.0%) | 5/40 (12.5%) 34/40 (85.0%) 1/40 (2.5%) | |
| 13 (0.3%) | 3 (0.2%) | 10 (0.4%) | |
| 9 (0.2%) | 2 (0.16%) | 7 (0.3%) |
Fig. 1Flow chart of study
Fig. 2The ROC curve shows the specificity and sensitivity of the PECARN Rule in identifying children ≥ 2 years with CT scan abnormalities
Fig. 3The ROC curve shows the specificity and sensitivity of the PECARN Rule in identifying children under 2 years with CT scan abnormalities