Quantifying uncertainty: physicians' estimates of infection in critically ill neonates and children.


Autoria(s): Fischer J.E.; Harbarth S.; Agthe A.G.; Benn A.; Ringer S.A.; Goldmann D.A.; Fanconi S.
Data(s)

2004

Resumo

To determine the diagnostic accuracy of physicians' prior probability estimates of serious infection in critically ill neonates and children, we conducted a prospective cohort study in 2 intensive care units. Using available clinical, laboratory, and radiographic information, 27 physicians provided 2567 probability estimates for 347 patients (follow-up rate, 92%). The median probability estimate of infection increased from 0% (i.e., no antibiotic treatment or diagnostic work-up for sepsis), to 2% on the day preceding initiation of antibiotic therapy, to 20% at initiation of antibiotic treatment (P<.001). At initiation of treatment, predictions discriminated well between episodes subsequently classified as proven infection and episodes ultimately judged unlikely to be infection (area under the curve, 0.88). Physicians also showed a good ability to predict blood culture-positive sepsis (area under the curve, 0.77). Treatment and testing thresholds were derived from the provided predictions and treatment rates. Physicians' prognoses regarding the presence of serious infection were remarkably precise. Studies investigating the value of new tests for diagnosis of sepsis should establish that they add incremental value to physicians' judgment.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_17468C026772

isbn:1537-6591

pmid:15156475

doi:10.1086/420741

isiid:000221173300009

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Clinical Infectious Diseases, vol. 38, no. 10, pp. 1383-1390

Palavras-Chave #Child; Cohort Studies; Critical Illness; Decision Making; Drug Therapy; Female; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Infection/diagnosis; Infection/drug therapy; Male; Physicians; Predictive Value of Tests; Prospective Studies; Uncertainty
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article