Department of Emergency Medicine, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI 02903, USA.
Postgrad Med. 2010 Jan;122(1):52-60. doi: 10.3810/pgm.2010.01.2099.
We aimed to create a system for predicting which male emergency department (ED) patients with suspected chlamydial and/or gonococcal urethritis would have laboratory-confirmed infections based on clinical factors available at the initial ED encounter.
We used statistical models to develop a system to predict either the presence or absence of laboratory-confirmed chlamydial and/or gonorrheal urethritis based on patient demographics and presenting symptoms. Data for the system were extracted from a retrospective chart review of adult male patients who were suspected of having, and were tested for, chlamydial and/or gonococcal urethritis at an adult, urban, northeastern United States, academic ED from January 1998 to December 2004.
Among the 822 patients tested, 29.2% had chlamydia, gonorrhea, or both infections; 13.8% were infected with chlamydia alone, 12.1% were infected with gonorrhea alone, and 3.3% were infected with both. From the statistical models, the following factors were predictive of a positive laboratory test for chlamydia and/or gonorrhea: age < or = 24 years, penile discharge, sexual contact with someone known to have chlamydia and/or gonorrhea, and not having health care insurance. A system using a hierarchical grouping of these factors based on the predicted probabilities of a laboratory-confirmed chlamydial and/or gonococcal urethritis, paired with baseline ED prevalence of these infections, was confirmed through internal validation testing to modestly predict which patients had or did not have a laboratory-confirmed infection.
This system of a combination of risk factors available during the clinical encounter in the ED modestly predicts which adult male patients suspected of having chlamydial and/or gonorrheal urethritis are more likely to have or not have a laboratory-confirmed infection. A prospective study is needed to create and validate a clinical prediction rule based on the results of this system.
我们旨在建立一个系统,根据男性急诊患者就诊时的临床特征,预测其是否患有实验室确诊的衣原体和(或)淋病性尿道炎。
我们使用统计学模型,根据患者的人口统计学特征和临床表现,建立一个预测系统,以判断患者是否存在实验室确诊的衣原体和(或)淋病性尿道炎。该系统的数据来源于回顾性病历分析,研究对象为 1998 年 1 月至 2004 年 12 月期间,在位于美国东北部城市的一家成人学术急诊中心就诊,疑似患有衣原体和(或)淋病性尿道炎,并接受了衣原体和(或)淋病检测的成年男性患者。
在 822 名接受检测的患者中,29.2%患有衣原体、淋病或两者的混合感染;13.8%单独感染了衣原体,12.1%单独感染了淋病,3.3%同时感染了两者。根据统计模型,以下因素与衣原体和(或)淋病实验室检测阳性相关:年龄≤24 岁、阴茎分泌物、与已知患有衣原体和(或)淋病的人发生性接触、没有医疗保险。该系统基于对实验室确诊的衣原体和(或)淋病性尿道炎的预测概率,对这些因素进行分层分组,并结合这些感染在基线急诊室的流行率,通过内部验证测试被证实能够适度预测哪些患者存在或不存在实验室确诊的感染。
该系统将就诊时的临床特征相结合,能够适度预测疑似患有衣原体和(或)淋病性尿道炎的成年男性患者中,哪些患者更有可能存在或不存在实验室确诊的感染。需要进行前瞻性研究,以根据该系统的结果建立和验证一个临床预测规则。