Mignemi Megan E, Benvenuti Michael A, An Thomas J, Martus Jeffrey E, Mencio Gregory A, Lovejoy Stephen A, Copley Lawson A, Williams Derek J, Thomsen Isaac P, Schoenecker Jonathan G
Departments of Orthopaedics.
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2018 May/Jun;38(5):279-286. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000000811.
Musculoskeletal infections (MSKIs) are a common cause of pediatric hospitalization. Children affected by MSKI have highly variable hospital courses, which seem to depend on infection severity. Early stratification of infection severity would therefore help to maximize resource utilization and improve patient care. Currently, MSKIs are classified according to primary diagnoses such as osteomyelitis, pyomyositis, etc. These diagnoses, however, do not often occur in isolation and may differ widely in severity. On the basis of this, the authors propose a severity classification system that differentiates patients based on total infection burden and degree of dissemination.
The authors developed a classification system with operational definitions for MSKI severity based on the degree of dissemination. The operational definitions were applied retrospectively to a cohort of 202 pediatric patients with MSKI from a tertiary care children's hospital over a 5-year period (2008 to 2013). Hospital outcomes data [length of stay (LOS), number of surgeries, positive blood cultures, duration of antibiotics, intensive care unit LOS, number of days with fever, and number of imaging studies] were collected from the electronic medical record and compared between groups.
Patients with greater infection dissemination were more likely to have worse hospital outcomes for LOS, number of surgeries performed, number of positive blood cultures, duration of antibiotics, intensive care unit LOS, number of days with fever, and number of imaging studies performed. Peak C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, white blood cell count, and temperature were also higher in patients with more disseminated infection.
The severity classification system for pediatric MSKI defined in this study correlates with hospital outcomes and markers of inflammatory response. The advantage of this classification system is that it is applicable to different types of MSKI and represents a potentially complementary system to the previous practice of differentiating MSKI based on primary diagnosis. Early identification of disease severity in children with MSKI has the potential to enhance hospital outcomes through more efficient resource utilization and improved patient care.
Level II-prognostic study.
肌肉骨骼感染(MSKIs)是儿科住院的常见原因。受MSKI影响的儿童住院病程差异很大,这似乎取决于感染的严重程度。因此,早期对感染严重程度进行分层有助于最大限度地利用资源并改善患者护理。目前,MSKIs是根据原发性诊断进行分类的,如骨髓炎、脓性肌炎等。然而,这些诊断并不经常单独出现,严重程度可能差异很大。基于此,作者提出了一种严重程度分类系统,该系统根据总感染负担和传播程度对患者进行区分。
作者基于传播程度制定了一个MSKI严重程度的分类系统及操作定义。这些操作定义被回顾性应用于一家三级护理儿童医院5年期间(2008年至2013年)的202例患有MSKI的儿科患者队列。从电子病历中收集医院结局数据[住院时间(LOS)、手术次数、血培养阳性、抗生素使用时间、重症监护病房住院时间、发热天数和影像学检查次数],并在组间进行比较。
感染传播程度较高的患者在住院时间、手术次数、血培养阳性次数、抗生素使用时间、重症监护病房住院时间、发热天数和影像学检查次数等医院结局方面更可能较差。感染传播更广泛的患者的C反应蛋白峰值、红细胞沉降率、白细胞计数和体温也更高。
本研究中定义的儿科MSKI严重程度分类系统与医院结局和炎症反应标志物相关。该分类系统的优点是适用于不同类型的MSKI,并且是对先前基于原发性诊断区分MSKI的做法的潜在补充系统。早期识别MSKI患儿的疾病严重程度有可能通过更有效地利用资源和改善患者护理来提高医院结局。
II级-预后研究。