Streck Christian J, Vogel Adam M, Zhang Jingwen, Huang Eunice Y, Santore Matthew T, Tsao Kuojen, Falcone Richard A, Dassinger Melvin S, Russell Robert T, Blakely Martin L
Department of Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina Children's Hospital, Charleston, SC.
Department of Surgery, St Louis Children's Hospital, St Louis, MO.
J Am Coll Surg. 2017 Apr;224(4):449-458.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2016.12.041. Epub 2017 Jan 24.
Computed tomography is commonly used to rule out intra-abdominal injury (IAI) in children, despite associated cost and radiation exposure. Our purpose was to derive a prediction rule to identify children at very low risk for IAI after blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) for whom a CT scan of the abdomen would be unnecessary.
We prospectively enrolled children younger than 16 years of age who presented after BAT at 14 Level I pediatric trauma centers during 1 year. We excluded patients who presented more than 6 hours after injury or underwent abdominal CT before transfer. We used binary recursive partitioning to derive a prediction rule identifying children at very low risk of IAI and IAI requiring acute intervention (IAI-I) using clinical information available in the trauma bay.
We included 2,188 children with a median age of 8 years. There were 261 patients with IAI (11.9%) and 62 patients with IAI-I (2.8%). The prediction rule consisted of (in descending order of significance): aspartate aminotransferase >200 U/L, abnormal abdominal examination, abnormal chest x-ray, report of abdominal pain, and abnormal pancreatic enzymes. The rule had a negative predictive value of 99.4% for IAI and 100.0% for IAI-I in patients with none of the prediction rule variables present. The very-low-risk population consisted of 34% of the patients and 23% received a CT scan. Computed tomography frequency ranged from 4% to 96% by center.
A prediction rule using history and physical examination, chest x-ray, and laboratory evaluation at the time of presentation after BAT identifies children at very low risk for IAI for whom CT can be avoided.
尽管存在相关成本和辐射暴露问题,但计算机断层扫描(CT)仍常用于排除儿童腹腔内损伤(IAI)。我们的目的是得出一种预测规则,以识别钝性腹部创伤(BAT)后IAI风险极低、无需进行腹部CT扫描的儿童。
我们前瞻性纳入了14家一级儿科创伤中心在1年内因BAT就诊的16岁以下儿童。我们排除了受伤后超过6小时就诊或在转运前接受过腹部CT检查的患者。我们使用二元递归划分法,根据创伤室可获得的临床信息,得出一种预测规则,以识别IAI风险极低以及需要急性干预的IAI(IAI-I)风险极低的儿童。
我们纳入了2188名儿童,中位年龄为8岁。有261例IAI患者(11.9%)和62例IAI-I患者(2.8%)。预测规则由(按重要性降序排列):天冬氨酸转氨酶>200 U/L、腹部检查异常、胸部X光异常、腹痛报告和胰腺酶异常组成。对于不存在任何预测规则变量的患者,该规则对IAI的阴性预测值为99.4%,对IAI-I的阴性预测值为100.0%。极低风险人群占患者总数的34%,其中23%接受了CT扫描。各中心的CT扫描频率在4%至96%之间。
一种基于BAT后就诊时的病史、体格检查、胸部X光和实验室评估的预测规则,可识别IAI风险极低、可避免进行CT检查的儿童。