Department of Pediatrics, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon NH, USA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2013 Feb;14(2):210-20. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0b013e3182712b09.
Abusive head trauma is a leading cause of traumatic death and disability during infancy and early childhood. Evidence-based screening tools for abusive head trauma do not exist. Our research objectives were 1) to measure the predictive relationships between abusive head trauma and isolated, discriminating, and reliable clinical variables and 2) to derive a reliable, sensitive, abusive head trauma clinical prediction rule that-if validated-can inform pediatric intensivists' early decisions to launch (or forego) an evaluation for abuse.
Prospective, multicenter, cross-sectional, observational.
Fourteen PICUs.
Acutely head-injured children less than 3 years old admitted for intensive care.
None.
Applying a priori definitional criteria for abusive head trauma, we identified clinical variables that were discriminating and reliable, calculated likelihood ratios and post-test probabilities of abuse, and applied recursive partitioning to derive an abusive head trauma clinical prediction rule with maximum sensitivity-to help rule out abusive head trauma, if negative. Pretest probability (prevalence) of abusive head trauma in our study population was 0.45 (95 of 209). Post-test probabilities of abusive head trauma for isolated, discriminating, and reliable clinical variables ranged from 0.1 to 0.86. Some of these variables, when positive, shifted probability of abuse upward greatly but changed it little when negative. Other variables, when negative, largely excluded abusive head trauma but increased probability of abuse only slightly when positive. Some discriminating variables demonstrated poor inter-rater reliability. A cluster of five discriminating and reliable variables available at or near the time of hospital admission identified 97% of study patients meeting a priori definitional criteria for abusive head trauma. Negative predictive value was 91%.
A more completeunderstanding of the specific predictive qualities of isolated, discriminating, and reliable variables could improve screening accuracy. If validated, a reliable, sensitive, abusive head trauma clinical prediction rule could be used by pediatric intensivists to calculate an evidence-based, patient-specific estimate of abuse probability that can inform-not dictate-their early decisions to launch (or forego) an evaluation for abuse.
虐待性头部创伤是婴儿和幼儿期创伤性死亡和残疾的主要原因。目前尚无针对虐待性头部创伤的基于证据的筛查工具。我们的研究目的是:1)测量虐待性头部创伤与孤立、有区别和可靠的临床变量之间的预测关系;2)得出一个可靠、敏感的虐待性头部创伤临床预测规则,如果验证有效,可以为儿科重症监护医生提供有关早期决定(或放弃)进行虐待评估的信息。
前瞻性、多中心、横断面、观察性研究。
14 个儿科重症监护病房。
急性头部受伤且年龄小于 3 岁的儿童,收入重症监护病房。
无。
根据虐待性头部创伤的预先定义标准,我们确定了具有区别性和可靠性的临床变量,计算了滥用的似然比和后测概率,并应用递归分区来推导出一个具有最大敏感性的虐待性头部创伤临床预测规则-如果为阴性,可以帮助排除虐待性头部创伤。在我们的研究人群中,虐待性头部创伤的术前(患病率)概率为 0.45(209 例中的 95 例)。孤立、有区别和可靠的临床变量的虐待性头部创伤后测概率范围为 0.1 至 0.86。这些变量中的一些,如果为阳性,会大大提高虐待的可能性,但如果为阴性,则几乎没有改变。其他变量,如果为阴性,则基本排除了虐待性头部创伤,但如果为阳性,则仅略微增加了虐待的可能性。一些有区别的变量显示出较差的组内可靠性。在入院时或入院附近获得的一组五个有区别和可靠的变量确定了 97%符合虐待性头部创伤预先定义标准的研究患者。阴性预测值为 91%。
更全面地了解孤立、有区别和可靠变量的具体预测质量可以提高筛查的准确性。如果验证有效,一个可靠、敏感的虐待性头部创伤临床预测规则可以由儿科重症监护医生使用,以计算基于证据的、针对患者个体的虐待可能性估计值,为他们提供有关(而非决定)进行虐待评估的早期决策。