Centre for Communicable Diseases and Infection Control, Infectious Disease Prevention and Control Branch, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Acad Emerg Med. 2013 Apr;20(4):388-97. doi: 10.1111/acem.12111.
Weekly influenza-like illness (ILI) consultation rates are an integral part of influenza surveillance. However, in most health care settings, only a small proportion of true influenza cases are clinically diagnosed as influenza or ILI. The primary objective of this study was to estimate the number and rate of visits to the emergency department (ED) that are attributable to seasonal and pandemic influenza and to describe the effect of influenza on the ED by age, diagnostic categories, and visit disposition. A secondary objective was to assess the weekly "real-time" time series of ILI ED visits as an indicator of the full burden due to influenza.
The authors performed an ecologic analysis of ED records extracted from the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NARCS) database for the province of Ontario, Canada, from September 2003 to March 2010 and stratified by diagnostic characteristics (International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision [ICD-10]), age, and visit disposition. A regression model was used to estimate the seasonal baseline. The weekly number of influenza-attributable ED visits was calculated as the difference between the weekly number of visits predicted by the statistical model and the estimated baseline.
The estimated rate of ED visits attributable to influenza was elevated during the H1N1/2009 pandemic period at 1,000 per 100,000 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 920 to 1,100) population compared to an average annual rate of 500 per 100,000 (95% CI = 450 to 550) for seasonal influenza. ILI or influenza was clinically diagnosed in one of 2.6 (38%) and one of 14 (7%) of these visits, respectively. While the ILI or clinical influenza diagnosis was the diagnosis most specific to influenza, only 87% and 58% of the clinically diagnosed ILI or influenza visits for pandemic and seasonal influenza, respectively, were likely directly due to an influenza infection. Rates for ILI ED visits were highest for younger age groups, while the likelihood of admission to hospital was highest in older persons. During periods of seasonal influenza activity, there was a significant increase in the number of persons who registered with nonrespiratory complaints, but left without being seen. This effect was more pronounced during the 2009 pandemic. The ratio of influenza-attributed respiratory visits to influenza-attributed ILI visits varied from 2.4:1 for the fall H1N1/2009 wave to 9:1 for the 2003/04 influenza A(H3N2) season and 28:1 for the 2007/08 H1N1 season.
Influenza appears to have had a much larger effect on ED visits than was captured by clinical diagnoses of influenza or ILI. Throughout the study period, ILI ED visits were strongly associated with excess respiratory complaints. However, the relationship between ILI ED visits and the estimated effect of influenza on ED visits was not consistent enough from year to year to predict the effect of influenza on the ED or downstream in-hospital resource requirements.
每周流感样疾病(ILI)就诊率是流感监测的重要组成部分。然而,在大多数医疗保健环境中,只有一小部分真正的流感病例被临床诊断为流感或 ILI。本研究的主要目的是估算因季节性和大流行性流感而前往急诊部(ED)就诊的人数和就诊率,并按年龄、诊断类别和就诊处置情况描述流感对 ED 的影响。次要目的是评估每周“实时”ILI-ED 就诊时间序列,以评估流感的全部负担。
作者对 2003 年 9 月至 2010 年 3 月期间从加拿大安大略省国家门诊护理报告系统(NARCS)数据库中提取的 ED 记录进行了生态分析,并按诊断特征(国际疾病分类,第 10 次修订版[ICD-10])、年龄和就诊处置情况进行了分层。采用回归模型来估计季节性基线。ILI 归因于 ED 就诊的每周就诊人数是通过统计模型预测的每周就诊人数与估计基线之间的差值计算得出的。
在 H1N1/2009 大流行期间,归因于流感的 ED 就诊率为每 10 万人中有 1000 人(95%置信区间[CI]为 920 至 1100),而季节性流感的平均年就诊率为每 10 万人中有 500 人(95%CI 为 450 至 550)。在这些就诊中,ILI 或流感的临床诊断率分别为 2.6%(38%)和 14%(7%)。虽然 ILI 或临床流感诊断是最能反映流感的诊断方法,但季节性流感和大流行性流感中分别只有 87%和 58%的经临床诊断为 ILI 或流感的就诊可能是直接由流感感染引起的。ILI-ED 就诊率在年龄较小的人群中最高,而在老年人中住院的可能性最高。在季节性流感活动期间,登记有非呼吸道疾病但未就诊的人数显著增加,这种情况在 2009 年大流行期间更为明显。流感归因于呼吸道疾病的就诊人数与流感归因于 ILI 的就诊人数之比从 2009 年秋季 H1N1 大流行的 2.4:1 变化到 2003/04 年甲型 H3N2 流感的 9:1 和 2007/08 年 H1N1 流感的 28:1。
流感对 ED 就诊的影响似乎比临床诊断为流感或 ILI 所反映的要大得多。在整个研究期间,ILI-ED 就诊与呼吸系统疾病的过度就诊密切相关。然而,ILI-ED 就诊与估计流感对 ED 就诊的影响之间的关系并不足以从一年到另一年进行预测,无法预测流感对 ED 或下游住院资源需求的影响。