Langdorf M I, Rudkin S E, Dellota K, Fox J C, Munden S
University of California Irvine, Division of Emergency Medicine, 101 The City Drive South, Route 128, Orange, CA 92868-3298, USA.
Eur J Emerg Med. 2002 Jun;9(2):115-21. doi: 10.1097/00063110-200206000-00003.
The objective of this study was to determine the impact of urine drug screening of major trauma victims on patient care and derive a decision rule for selective screening. Retrospective chart review of 170 trauma patients at a Level I Trauma Center, certified by the American College of Surgeons, was undertaken. The decision rule was developed by Classification and Regression Tree (CART) analysis to maximize sensitivity, with secondary attention to specificity. Eighty-nine percent of trauma patients were screened, while 26.0% had positive tests for illicit drugs. Serum ethanol was positive in 31.2%, over the legal limit of 0.08 g/dl. Both a legally intoxicated ethanol level and positive illicit drug screen were found in 11.0%. Additionally, 42.5% of patients with a positive illicit drug screen were also intoxicated (blood alcohol level above legal limit). Conversely, 35.4% of legally intoxicated patients also had positive illicit screens. Drug treatment referral occurred in 17.5% of positive drug screens. For urgent surgery, median time to drug screen result was 117 min, while median time to operation was 110 min. Of operative patients, 57% had the drug screen result recorded on the chart at any time, but only 14.3% of illicit screens were noted in the anaesthesia record. For all patients with and without operations, 71.1% had the result noted on the chart. We derived a 'low risk rule' to identify most patients with positive illicit drug screens (95% sensitivity, 55% specificity, 66% positive and 93% negative predictive values; accuracy 74%), while limiting the number of unnecessary tests. The rule avoids screening 48% of patients, missing only 5% of true positives. It is concluded that urine screening for illicit drugs in trauma patients can be performed selectively according to a decision rule based on demographics, mechanism of injury and time of presentation. This rule, which captures most positive screens while eliminating screening in low risk patients, could result in significant cost savings. Only prospective validation of these rules in patient populations of other trauma centres will offer confidence that the decision points are valid. Urine drug screening infrequently affected patient management or resulted in drug treatment referral in our sample. We call for increased vigilance in recording results and referring patients for treatment.
本研究的目的是确定对主要创伤受害者进行尿液药物筛查对患者护理的影响,并得出选择性筛查的决策规则。我们对一家经美国外科医师学会认证的一级创伤中心的170名创伤患者进行了回顾性病历审查。决策规则通过分类回归树(CART)分析制定,以最大限度地提高敏感性,同时兼顾特异性。89%的创伤患者接受了筛查,其中26.0%的非法药物检测呈阳性。血清乙醇检测呈阳性的比例为31.2%,超过了0.08 g/dl的法定限值。11.0%的患者乙醇水平达到法定醉酒标准且非法药物筛查呈阳性。此外,42.5%非法药物筛查呈阳性的患者同时也处于醉酒状态(血液酒精水平超过法定限值)。相反,35.4%达到法定醉酒标准的患者非法筛查也呈阳性。17.5%的阳性药物筛查患者被转介接受药物治疗。对于急诊手术,药物筛查结果的中位时间为117分钟,而手术的中位时间为110分钟。在接受手术的患者中,57%的患者病历上随时记录了药物筛查结果,但麻醉记录中仅记录了14.3%的非法筛查结果。对于所有接受手术和未接受手术的患者,71.1%的患者病历上记录了结果。我们得出了一个“低风险规则”,以识别大多数非法药物筛查呈阳性的患者(敏感性95%,特异性55%,阳性预测值66%,阴性预测值93%;准确率74%),同时限制不必要的检测数量。该规则避免了对48%的患者进行筛查,仅遗漏5%的真正阳性患者。研究得出结论,创伤患者的非法药物尿液筛查可根据基于人口统计学、损伤机制和就诊时间的决策规则进行选择性筛查。该规则能够捕捉到大多数阳性筛查结果,同时消除对低风险患者的筛查,从而显著节省成本。只有在其他创伤中心的患者群体中对这些规则进行前瞻性验证,才能确信这些决策点是有效的。在我们的样本中,尿液药物筛查很少影响患者管理或导致药物治疗转介。我们呼吁提高对记录结果和转介患者接受治疗的警惕性。