Antoon James W, Peritz David C, Parsons Michael R, Skinner Asheley C, Lohr Jacob A
Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital, University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System, Chicago, Illinois;
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Hosp Pediatr. 2018 Mar;8(3):135-140. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2017-0098.
Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is a well-known pediatric presentation. The primary studies determining the causes of prolonged fever in children were performed 4 decades ago, before major advances in laboratory and diagnostic testing. Given that the distribution of diagnosed causes of adult FUO has changed in recent decades, we hypothesized that the etiology of FUO in children has concordantly changed and also may be impacted by a definition that includes a shorter required duration of fever.
A single-center, retrospective review of patients 6 months to 18 years of age admitted to the North Carolina Children's Hospital from January 1, 2002, to December 21, 2012, with an diagnosis of fever, a documented fever duration >7 days before admission, and a previous physician evaluation of each patient's illness.
A total of 1164 patients were identified, and of these, 102 met our inclusion criteria for FUO. Etiologic categories included "infectious" (42 out of 102 patients), "autoimmune" (28 out of 102 patients), "oncologic" (18 out of 102 patients), and "other" or "unknown" (14 out of 102 patients). Several clinical factors were statistically and significantly different between etiologic categories, including fever length, laboratory values, imaging performed, length of stay, and hospital costs.
Unlike adult studies, the categorical distribution of diagnoses for pediatric FUO has marginally shifted compared to previously reported pediatric studies. Patients hospitalized with FUO undergo prolonged hospital stays and have high hospital costs. Additional study is needed to improve the recognition, treatment, and expense of diagnosis of prolonged fever in children.
不明原因发热(FUO)是一种广为人知的儿科病症。确定儿童长期发热原因的主要研究是在40年前进行的,当时实验室和诊断检测尚未取得重大进展。鉴于近几十年来成人FUO确诊病因的分布发生了变化,我们推测儿童FUO的病因也相应发生了变化,并且可能受到发热所需持续时间较短这一定义的影响。
对2002年1月1日至2012年12月21日入住北卡罗来纳州儿童医院的6个月至18岁患者进行单中心回顾性研究,这些患者被诊断为发热,入院前有记录的发热持续时间>7天,且之前有医生对每位患者的病情进行过评估。
共识别出1164例患者,其中102例符合我们的FUO纳入标准。病因类别包括“感染性”(102例患者中的42例)、“自身免疫性”(102例患者中的28例)、“肿瘤性”(102例患者中的18例)以及“其他”或“不明”(102例患者中的14例)。病因类别之间的几个临床因素在统计学上有显著差异,包括发热时长、实验室检查值、所做的影像学检查、住院时长和住院费用。
与成人研究不同,与先前报道的儿科研究相比,儿科FUO诊断的类别分布略有变化。因FUO住院的患者住院时间延长且住院费用高昂。需要进一步研究以提高对儿童长期发热的识别、治疗及诊断费用。