Divisions of Hospital Medicine and
Divisions of Hospital Medicine and.
Hosp Pediatr. 2021 Sep;11(9):922-930. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2020-003129. Epub 2021 Aug 16.
Clinicians evaluating for herpes simplex virus (HSV) in febrile infants must balance detection with overtesting, and there is no universally accepted approach to risk stratification. We aimed to describe variation in diagnostic evaluation and empirical acyclovir treatment of infants aged 0 to 60 days presenting with fever and determine the association between testing and length of stay (LOS).
In this retrospective 44-hospital observational study, we used the Pediatric Health Information System database to identify infants aged ≤60 days evaluated for fever in emergency departments from January 2016 through December 2017. We described hospital-level variation in laboratory testing, including HSV, imaging and other diagnostic evaluations, acyclovir use, and LOS. We assessed the relationship between HSV testing and LOS using generalized linear mixed effects models adjusted for age and illness severity.
In 24 535 encounters for fever, the median HSV testing frequency across hospitals was 35.6% (interquartile range [IQR]: 28.5%-53.5%) for infants aged 0 to 21 days and 12% (IQR: 8.6%-15.7%) for infants aged 22 to 60 days. Among HSV-tested patients, median acyclovir use across hospitals was 79.2% (IQR: 68.1%-89.7%) for those aged 0 to 21 days and 63.6% (IQR: 44.1%-73%) for those aged 22 to 60 days. The prevalence of additional testing varied substantially by hospital and age group. Risk-adjusted LOS for HSV-tested infants was significantly longer than risk-adjusted LOS for those not tested (2.6 vs 1.9 days, < .001).
Substantial variation exists in diagnostic evaluation and acyclovir use, and infants who received HSV testing had a longer LOS than infants who did not. This variability supports the need for further studies to help clinicians better risk-stratify febrile infants and to guide HSV testing and treatment decisions.
评估发热婴儿单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)的临床医生必须在检测和过度检测之间取得平衡,并且目前尚无普遍接受的风险分层方法。我们旨在描述 0 至 60 天龄发热婴儿的诊断评估和经验性阿昔洛韦治疗的差异,并确定检测与住院时间(LOS)之间的关联。
在这项回顾性的 44 家医院观察性研究中,我们使用儿科健康信息系统数据库,从 2016 年 1 月至 2017 年 12 月确定了在急诊科接受发热评估的 60 天龄以下婴儿。我们描述了医院层面的实验室检测差异,包括 HSV、影像学和其他诊断评估、阿昔洛韦使用和 LOS。我们使用广义线性混合效应模型评估了 HSV 检测与 LOS 之间的关系,并根据年龄和疾病严重程度进行了调整。
在 24535 例发热就诊中,医院之间 0 至 21 天龄婴儿 HSV 检测频率中位数为 35.6%(四分位距 [IQR]:28.5%至 53.5%),22 至 60 天龄婴儿为 12%(IQR:8.6%至 15.7%)。在接受 HSV 检测的患者中,医院之间 HSV 检测阳性患者的阿昔洛韦使用率中位数为 79.2%(IQR:68.1%至 89.7%),0 至 21 天龄患者为 63.6%(IQR:44.1%至 73%)。额外检测的发生率因医院和年龄组而异。与未接受 HSV 检测的婴儿相比,HSV 检测阳性婴儿的风险调整后 LOS 明显更长(2.6 天比 1.9 天,<0.001)。
在诊断评估和阿昔洛韦使用方面存在大量差异,接受 HSV 检测的婴儿比未接受 HSV 检测的婴儿的 LOS 更长。这种变异性支持进一步研究的需要,以帮助临床医生更好地对发热婴儿进行风险分层,并指导 HSV 检测和治疗决策。