1Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD. 2Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. 3Welsh Library for the School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. 4Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. 5Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2015 Jan;16(1):29-36. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000000274.
Diagnostic errors lead to preventable hospital morbidity and mortality. ICU patients may be at particularly high risk for misdiagnosis. Little is known about misdiagnosis in pediatrics, including PICU and neonatal ICU. We sought to assess diagnostic errors in PICU and neonatal ICU settings by systematic review.
We searched PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and Cochrane.
We identified observational studies reporting autopsy-confirmed diagnostic errors in PICU or neonatal ICU using standard Goldman criteria.
We abstracted patient characteristics, diagnostic error description, rates and error classes using standard Goldman criteria for autopsy misdiagnoses and calculated descriptive statistics.
We screened 329 citations, examined 79 full-text articles, and included 13 studies (seven PICU; six neonatal ICU). The PICU studies examined a total of 1,063 deaths and 498 autopsies. Neonatal ICU studies examined a total of 2,124 neonatal deaths and 1,259 autopsies. Major diagnostic errors were found in 19.6% of autopsied PICU and neonatal ICU deaths (class I, 4.5%; class II, 15.1%). Class I (potentially lethal) misdiagnoses in the PICU (43% infections, 37% vascular) and neonatal ICU (62% infections, 21% congenital/metabolic) differed slightly. Although missed infections were most common in both settings, missed vascular events were more common in the PICU and missed congenital conditions in the neonatal ICU.
Diagnostic errors in PICU/neonatal ICU populations are most commonly due to infection. Further research is needed to better quantify pediatric intensive care-related misdiagnosis and to define potential strategies to reduce their frequency or mitigate misdiagnosis-related harm.
诊断错误可导致可预防的医院发病率和死亡率。重症监护病房(ICU)的患者可能面临特别高的误诊风险。儿科,包括儿科重症监护病房(PICU)和新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的误诊情况知之甚少。我们试图通过系统评价评估 PICU 和 NICU 中的诊断错误。
我们检索了 PubMed、Embase、CINAHL 和 Cochrane。
我们确定了使用标准戈德曼标准报告 PICU 或新生儿 ICU 尸检证实的诊断错误的观察性研究。
我们提取了患者特征、诊断错误描述、使用标准戈德曼标准对尸检误诊的发生率和错误类别,并计算了描述性统计数据。
我们筛选了 329 篇引文,检查了 79 篇全文文章,并纳入了 13 项研究(7 项 PICU;6 项新生儿 ICU)。PICU 研究共检查了 1063 例死亡和 498 例尸检。新生儿 ICU 研究共检查了 2124 例新生儿死亡和 1259 例尸检。尸检证实的 PICU 和新生儿 ICU 死亡患者中发现了主要诊断错误(I 类,4.5%;II 类,15.1%)。PICU(43%感染,37%血管)和新生儿 ICU(62%感染,21%先天性/代谢)中 I 类(潜在致命)误诊的差异较小。虽然两种情况下都最常见漏诊感染,但 PICU 中漏诊血管事件更常见,而新生儿 ICU 中漏诊先天性疾病更常见。
PICU/NICU 人群中的诊断错误最常见于感染。需要进一步研究以更好地量化儿科重症监护相关误诊,并确定降低其频率或减轻误诊相关危害的潜在策略。