Department of Pediatrics and Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute (Osmond), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Pediatrics and Child Health (Klassen, Silver), University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man.; School of Epidemiology and Public Health (Wells), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Pediatrics (Davidson, Belanger), University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.; Clinical Research Unit (Correll), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Pediatrics, and Child Health Evaluative Sciences Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children (Boutis), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Department of Paediatrics (Joubert), Western University, London, Ont.; Paediatric Department (Gouin), CHU Sainte-Justine, Montréal, Que.; Department of Pediatrics (Khangura), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Department of Pediatrics (Turner), University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta.; Department of Pediatrics (Taylor, Curran), Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS; Department of Emergency Medicine and Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (Stiell), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ. 2018 Jul 9;190(27):E816-E822. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.170406.
There is uncertainty about which children with minor head injury need to undergo computed tomography (CT). We sought to prospectively validate the accuracy and potential for refinement of a previously derived decision rule, Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head injury (CATCH), to guide CT use in children with minor head injury.
This multicentre cohort study in 9 Canadian pediatric emergency departments prospectively enrolled children with blunt head trauma presenting with a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 13-15 and loss of consciousness, amnesia, disorientation, persistent vomiting or irritability. Phys icians completed standardized assessment forms before CT, including clinical predictors of the rule. The primary outcome was neurosurgical intervention and the secondary outcome was brain injury on CT. We calculated test characteristics of the rule and used recursive partitioning to further refine the rule.
Of 4060 enrolled patients, 23 (0.6%) underwent neurosurgical intervention, and 197 (4.9%) had brain injury on CT. The original 7-item rule (CATCH) had sensitivities of 91.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 72.0%-98.9%) for neurosurgical intervention and 97.5% (95% CI 94.2%-99.2%) for predicting brain injury. Adding "≥ 4 episodes of vomiting" resulted in a refined 8-item rule (CATCH2) with 100% (95% CI 85.2%-100%) sensitivity for neurosurgical intervention and 99.5% (95% CI 97.2%-100%) sensitivity for brain injury.
Among children presenting to the emergency department with minor head injury, the CATCH2 rule was highly sensitive for identifying those children requiring neurosurgical intervention and those with any brain injury on CT. The CATCH2 rule should be further validated in an implementation study designed to assess its clinical impact.
对于轻微头部外伤的患儿,哪些需要行计算机断层扫描(CT)检查存在不确定性。我们旨在前瞻性验证先前得出的决策规则——加拿大儿童头部外伤 CT 评估(CATCH)的准确性和潜在改进,以指导轻微头部外伤患儿 CT 的使用。
本多中心队列研究纳入 9 家加拿大儿科急诊的钝性头部创伤患儿,格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分为 13-15 分且存在意识丧失、遗忘、定向障碍、持续呕吐或易激惹。医生在 CT 检查前填写标准化评估表,包括该规则的临床预测因素。主要结局为神经外科干预,次要结局为 CT 上的脑损伤。我们计算了规则的检测特征,并使用递归分区进一步细化了规则。
在 4060 例纳入的患儿中,23 例(0.6%)接受了神经外科干预,197 例(4.9%)CT 上有脑损伤。原始的 7 项规则(CATCH)对神经外科干预的敏感性为 91.3%(95%置信区间[CI]72.0%-98.9%),对预测脑损伤的敏感性为 97.5%(95%CI 94.2%-99.2%)。增加“≥4 次呕吐”得到了改进的 8 项规则(CATCH2),对神经外科干预的敏感性为 100%(95%CI 85.2%-100%),对脑损伤的敏感性为 99.5%(95%CI 97.2%-100%)。
在急诊科就诊的轻微头部外伤患儿中,CATCH2 规则对识别需要神经外科干预和 CT 上有任何脑损伤的患儿具有高度敏感性。CATCH2 规则应在旨在评估其临床影响的实施研究中进一步验证。