Department of General Paediatrics, Erasmus MC - Sophia Children's Hospital, P.O. Box 2060, 3000 CB, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Paediatrics, HAGA-Juliana Children's Hospital, Den Haag, The Netherlands.
Eur J Pediatr. 2021 Sep;180(9):2765-2772. doi: 10.1007/s00431-021-03996-2. Epub 2021 Mar 22.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the influence of chest X-ray (CXR) results on antibiotic prescription in children suspected of lower respiratory tract infections (RTI) in the emergency department (ED). We performed a secondary analysis of a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized trial of children aged 1 month to 5 years with fever and cough/dyspnoea in 8 EDs in the Netherlands (2016-2018), including a 1-week follow-up. We analysed the observational data of the pre-intervention period, using multivariable logistic regression to evaluate the influence of CXR result on antibiotic prescription. We included 597 children (median age 17 months [IQR 9-30, 61% male). CXR was performed in 109/597 (18%) of children (range across hospitals 9 to 50%); 52/109 (48%) showed focal infiltrates. Children who underwent CXR were more likely to receive antibiotics, also when adjusted for clinical signs and symptoms, hospital and CXR result (OR 7.25 [95% CI 2.48-21.2]). Abnormalities on CXR were not significantly associated with antibiotic prescription.Conclusion: Performance of CXR was independently associated with more antibiotic prescription, regardless of its results. The limited influence of CXR results on antibiotic prescription highlights the inferior role of CXR on treatment decisions for suspected lower RTI in the ED. What is Known: • Chest X-ray (CXR) has a high inter-observer variability and cannot distinguish between bacterial or viral pneumonia. • Current guidelines recommend against routine use of CXR in children with uncomplicated respiratory tract infections (RTIs) in the outpatient setting. What is New: • CXR is still frequently performed in non-complex children suspected of lower RTIs in the emergency department • CXR performance was independently associated with more antibiotic prescriptions, regardless of its results, highlighting the inferior role of chest X-rays in treatment decisions.
本研究旨在评估胸部 X 光(CXR)结果对急诊科疑似下呼吸道感染(RTI)儿童抗生素处方的影响。我们对荷兰 8 家急诊科 1 个月至 5 岁发热伴咳嗽/呼吸困难儿童进行了一项 stepped-wedge、聚类随机试验的二次分析(2016-2018 年),包括 1 周随访。我们分析了干预前阶段的观察数据,使用多变量逻辑回归评估 CXR 结果对抗生素处方的影响。我们纳入了 597 名儿童(中位数年龄 17 个月[IQR 9-30,61%为男性])。597 名儿童中 109 名(18%)进行了 CXR(医院间范围为 9 至 50%);52/109(48%)显示局灶性浸润。与未行 CXR 的儿童相比,行 CXR 的儿童更有可能接受抗生素治疗,即使调整了临床体征和症状、医院和 CXR 结果也是如此(OR 7.25[95%CI 2.48-21.2])。CXR 异常与抗生素处方之间无显著相关性。结论:无论 CXR 结果如何,进行 CXR 与抗生素处方量增加独立相关。CXR 结果对抗生素处方的影响有限,突显了 CXR 在急诊科疑似下 RTI 治疗决策中的次要作用。已知情况:• CXR 观察者间变异性较大,无法区分细菌性或病毒性肺炎。• 现有指南建议,在门诊环境中,对于无并发症的呼吸道感染(RTIs)患儿,不常规使用 CXR。新情况:• CXR 仍广泛应用于急诊科疑似下 RTI 的非复杂儿童中• CXR 执行与更多抗生素处方独立相关,无论其结果如何,这突显了 CXR 在治疗决策中的次要作用。