Berger Rachel Pardes, Fromkin Janet, Herman Bruce, Pierce Mary Clyde, Saladino Richard A, Flom Lynda, Tyler-Kabara Elizabeth C, McGinn Tom, Richichi Rudolph, Kochanek Patrick M
Departments of Pediatrics, Safar Center for Resuscitation Research, Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;
Departments of Pediatrics.
Pediatrics. 2016 Jul;138(1). doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-3756. Epub 2016 Jun 23.
Abusive head trauma is the leading cause of death from physical abuse. Misdiagnosis of abusive head trauma as well as other types of brain abnormalities in infants is common and contributes to increased morbidity and mortality. We previously derived the Pittsburgh Infant Brain Injury Score (PIBIS), a clinical prediction rule to assist physicians deciding which high-risk infants should undergo computed tomography of the head.
Well-appearing infants 30 to 364 days of age with temperature <38.3°C, no history of trauma, and a symptom associated with an increased risk of having a brain abnormality were eligible for enrollment in this prospective, multicenter clinical prediction rule validation. By using a predefined neuroimaging paradigm, subjects were classified as cases or controls. The sensitivity, specificity, and negative and positive predictive values of the rule for prediction of brain injury were calculated.
A total of 1040 infants were enrolled: 214 cases and 826 controls. The 5-point PIBIS included abnormality on dermatologic examination (2 points), age ≥3.0 months (1 point), head circumference >85th percentile (1 point), and serum hemoglobin <11.2g/dL (1 point). At a score of 2, the sensitivity and specificity for abnormal neuroimaging was 93.3% (95% confidence interval 89.0%-96.3%) and 53% (95% confidence interval 49.3%-57.1%), respectively.
Our data suggest that the PIBIS accurately identifies infants who would benefit from neuroimaging to evaluate for brain injury. An implementation analysis is needed before the PIBIS can be integrated into clinical practice.
虐待性头部创伤是身体虐待导致死亡的主要原因。将虐待性头部创伤误诊为婴儿的其他类型脑异常情况很常见,这会导致发病率和死亡率上升。我们之前得出了匹兹堡婴儿脑损伤评分(PIBIS),这是一种临床预测规则,可帮助医生决定哪些高危婴儿应接受头部计算机断层扫描。
年龄在30至364天、体温<38.3°C、无创伤史且有与脑异常风险增加相关症状的健康婴儿符合参与这项前瞻性、多中心临床预测规则验证研究的条件。通过使用预定义的神经影像学范式,将受试者分为病例组或对照组。计算该规则预测脑损伤的敏感性、特异性以及阴性和阳性预测值。
共纳入1040名婴儿:214例病例和826例对照。5分的PIBIS包括皮肤检查异常(2分)、年龄≥3.0个月(1分)、头围>第85百分位数(1分)以及血清血红蛋白<11.2g/dL(1分)。得分为2时,神经影像学异常的敏感性和特异性分别为93.3%(95%置信区间89.0%-96.3%)和53%(95%置信区间49.3%-57.1%)。
我们的数据表明,PIBIS能准确识别出可从神经影像学检查中受益以评估脑损伤的婴儿。在将PIBIS纳入临床实践之前,需要进行实施分析。