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Properties of Serial Ultrasound Clinical Diagnostic Pathway in Suspected Appendicitis and Related Computed Tomography Use
Author(s) -
Schuh Suzanne,
Chan Kevin,
Langer Jacob C.,
Kulik Dina,
PretoZamperlini Marcela,
Aswad Nadine Al,
Man Carina,
Mohanta Arun,
Stephens Derek,
Doria Andrea S.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
academic emergency medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.221
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1553-2712
pISSN - 1069-6563
DOI - 10.1111/acem.12631
Subject(s) - medicine , appendicitis , emergency department , radiology , diagnostic accuracy , confidence interval , prospective cohort study , clinical pathway , ultrasound , computed tomography , surgery , nursing , psychiatry
Objectives The primary objective was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of a serial ultrasound ( US ) clinical diagnostic pathway to detect appendicitis in children presenting to the emergency department ( ED ). The secondary objective was to examine the diagnostic performance of the initial and interval US and to compare the accuracy of the pathway to that of the initial US . Methods This was a prospective cohort study of 294 previously healthy children 4 to 17 years old with suspected appendicitis and baseline pediatric appendicitis scores of ≥2, who were managed with the serial US clinical diagnostic pathway. This pathway consisted of an initial US followed by a clinical reassessment in each patient and an interval US and surgical consultation in patients with equivocal initial US and persistent concern about appendicitis. The US s were interpreted by published criteria as positive, negative, or equivocal for appendicitis. Children in whom this pathway did not rule in or rule out appendicitis underwent computed tomography ( CT ). Cases with missed appendicitis, negative operations, and CT s after the pathway were considered inaccurate. The primary outcome was the diagnostic accuracy of the serial US clinical diagnostic pathway. The secondary outcomes included the test performance of the initial and interval US imaging studies. Results Of the 294 study children, 111 (38%) had appendicitis. Using the serial US clinical diagnostic pathway, 274 of 294 children (93%, 95% confidence interval [ CI ] = 90% to 96%) had diagnostically accurate results: 108 of the 111 (97%) appendicitis cases were successfully identified by the pathway without CT scans (two missed and one CT ), and 166 of the 183 (91%) negative cases were ruled out without CT scans (14 negative operations and three CT s). The sensitivity of this pathway was 108 of 111 (97%, 95% CI  = 94% to 100%), specificity 166 of 183 (91%, 95% CI  = 87% to 95%), positive predictive value 108 of 125 (86%; 95% CI  = 79% to 92%), and negative predictive value 166 of 169 (98%, 95% CI  = 96% to 100%). The diagnostic accuracy of the pathway was higher than that of the initial US alone (274 of 294 vs. 160 of 294; p < 0.0001). Of 123 patients with equivocal initial US , concern about appendicitis subsided on clinical reassessment in 73 (no surgery and no missed appendicitis). Of 50 children with persistent symptoms, 40 underwent interval US and 10 had surgical consultation alone. The interval US confirmed or ruled out appendicitis in 22 of 40 children (55.0%) with equivocal initial US , with one false‐positive interval US . Conclusions The serial US clinical diagnostic pathway in suspected appendicitis has an acceptable diagnostic accuracy that is significantly higher than that of the initial US and results in few CT scans. This approach appears most useful in children with equivocal initial US , in whom the majority of negative cases were identified at clinical reassessment and appendicitis was diagnosed by interval US or surgical consultation in most study patients.

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