Bravata Dena M, McDonald Kathryn M, Smith Wendy M, Rydzak Chara, Szeto Herbert, Buckeridge David L, Haberland Corinna, Owens Douglas K
University of California, San Francisco-Stanford Evidence-based Practice Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2004 Jun 1;140(11):910-22. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-140-11-200406010-00013.
Given the threat of bioterrorism and the increasing availability of electronic data for surveillance, surveillance systems for the early detection of illnesses and syndromes potentially related to bioterrorism have proliferated.
To critically evaluate the potential utility of existing surveillance systems for illnesses and syndromes related to bioterrorism.
Databases of peer-reviewed articles (for example, MEDLINE for articles published from January 1985 to April 2002) and Web sites of relevant government and nongovernment agencies.
Reports that described or evaluated systems for collecting, analyzing, or presenting surveillance data for bioterrorism-related illnesses or syndromes.
From each included article, the authors abstracted information about the type of surveillance data collected; method of collection, analysis, and presentation of surveillance data; and outcomes of evaluations of the system.
17,510 article citations and 8088 government and nongovernmental Web sites were reviewed. From these, the authors included 115 systems that collect various surveillance reports, including 9 syndromic surveillance systems, 20 systems collecting bioterrorism detector data, 13 systems collecting influenza-related data, and 23 systems collecting laboratory and antimicrobial resistance data. Only the systems collecting syndromic surveillance data and detection system data were designed, at least in part, for bioterrorism preparedness applications. Syndromic surveillance systems have been deployed for both event-based and continuous bioterrorism surveillance. Few surveillance systems have been comprehensively evaluated. Only 3 systems have had both sensitivity and specificity evaluated.
Data from some existing surveillance systems (particularly those developed by the military) may not be publicly available.
Few surveillance systems have been specifically designed for collecting and analyzing data for the early detection of a bioterrorist event. Because current evaluations of surveillance systems for detecting bioterrorism and emerging infections are insufficient to characterize the timeliness or sensitivity and specificity, clinical and public health decision making based on these systems may be compromised.
鉴于生物恐怖主义的威胁以及用于监测的电子数据日益增多,用于早期发现可能与生物恐怖主义相关的疾病和综合征的监测系统大量涌现。
严格评估现有监测系统对于与生物恐怖主义相关的疾病和综合征的潜在效用。
同行评审文章数据库(例如,1985年1月至2002年4月发表文章的MEDLINE)以及相关政府和非政府机构的网站。
描述或评估用于收集、分析或呈现与生物恐怖主义相关疾病或综合征监测数据的系统的报告。
作者从每篇纳入的文章中提取了有关所收集监测数据类型、监测数据的收集、分析和呈现方法以及系统评估结果的信息。
对17510篇文章引用和8088个政府及非政府网站进行了审查。从中,作者纳入了115个收集各种监测报告的系统,包括9个症状监测系统、20个收集生物恐怖主义探测器数据的系统、13个收集流感相关数据的系统以及23个收集实验室和抗菌药物耐药性数据的系统。只有收集症状监测数据和检测系统数据的系统至少部分是为生物恐怖主义防范应用而设计的。症状监测系统已用于基于事件和持续的生物恐怖主义监测。很少有监测系统得到全面评估。只有3个系统同时评估了敏感性和特异性。
一些现有监测系统(特别是军方开发的系统)的数据可能不公开。
专门设计用于收集和分析数据以早期发现生物恐怖主义事件的监测系统很少。由于目前对用于检测生物恐怖主义和新出现感染的监测系统的评估不足以确定其及时性、敏感性和特异性,基于这些系统的临床和公共卫生决策可能会受到影响。