Emergency Department, Queensland Children's Hospital, Children's Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service, South Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Child Health Research Centre, University of Queensland, South Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Emerg Med J. 2021 May;38(5):330-337. doi: 10.1136/emermed-2020-210325.
Clinical decision rules (CDRs) are commonly used to guide imaging decisions in cervical spine injury (CSI) assessment despite limited evidence for their use in paediatric populations. We set out to determine CSI incidence, imaging rates and the frequency of previously identified CSI risk factors, and thus assess the projected impact on imaging rates if CDRs were strictly applied as a rule in our population.
A single-centre prospective observational study on all aged under 16 years presenting for assessment of possible CSI to a tertiary paediatric emergency department over a year, commencing September 2015. CDR variables from the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study (NEXUS) rule, Canadian C-Spine rule (CCR) and proposed Paediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) rule were collected prospectively and applied post hoc.
1010 children were enrolled; 973 had not received prior imaging. Of these, 40.7% received cervical spine imaging; 32.4% X-rays, 13.4% CT scan and 3% MRI. All three CDRs identified the five children (0.5%) with CSI who had not received prior imaging. If CDRs were strictly applied as a rule for imaging, projected imaging rates in our setting would be as follows: NEXUS-44% (95% CI 41% to 47.4%), CCR-at least 48.4% (95% CI 45.3% to 51.7%) and PECARN-68% (95% CI 65.1% to 71.1).
CSIs were rare (0.5% of our cohort), however, 40% of children received imaging. CDRs have been designed to guide imaging decisions; if strictly applied as a rule for imaging, the CDRs assessed in this study would increase imaging rates. Projected rates differ considerably depending on the CDR applied. These findings highlight the need for a validated paediatric-specific cervical spine imaging CDR.
临床决策规则(CDR)常用于指导颈椎损伤(CSI)评估中的影像学决策,尽管其在儿科人群中的应用证据有限。我们旨在确定 CSI 的发生率、影像学检查率以及先前确定的 CSI 危险因素的频率,从而评估如果在我们的人群中严格应用 CDR 作为规则,对影像学检查率的预期影响。
这是一项在 2015 年 9 月开始的一年中,对所有年龄在 16 岁以下的因疑似 CSI 而到三级儿科急诊就诊的患者进行的单中心前瞻性观察研究。前瞻性收集了国家急诊 X 射线利用研究(NEXUS)规则、加拿大颈椎规则(CCR)和拟议的儿科急诊护理应用研究网络(PECARN)规则中的 CDR 变量,并在事后进行了应用。
共纳入 1010 名儿童;其中 973 名儿童未接受过影像学检查。在这些儿童中,40.7%接受了颈椎影像学检查;32.4% X 光检查,13.4% CT 扫描,3% MRI。所有三个 CDR 均识别出 5 名未接受过影像学检查的 CSI 患儿(0.5%)。如果严格按照规则进行影像学检查,我们的设定中预计的影像学检查率如下:NEXUS-44%(95%CI 41%至 47.4%),CCR-至少 48.4%(95%CI 45.3%至 51.7%),PECARN-68%(95%CI 65.1%至 71.1%)。
CSI 很少见(我们队列的 0.5%),但 40%的儿童接受了影像学检查。CDR 旨在指导影像学决策;如果严格按照规则进行影像学检查,本研究评估的 CDR 将增加影像学检查率。应用不同的 CDR 预计的比率有很大的差异。这些发现强调了需要制定一种经验证的儿科专用颈椎影像学 CDR。