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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 22

of 'Initial evaluation and management of blunt abdominal trauma in adults'

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Validation of a prediction rule for the identification of children with intra-abdominal injuries after blunt torso trauma.
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Holmes JF, Mao A, Awasthi S, McGahan JP, Wisner DH, Kuppermann N
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Ann Emerg Med. 2009 Oct;54(4):528-33. Epub 2009 Feb 28.
 
STUDY OBJECTIVE: We validate the accuracy of a previously derived clinical prediction rule for the identification of children with intra-abdominal injuries after blunt torso trauma.
METHODS: We conducted a prospective observational study of children with blunt torso trauma who were evaluated for intra-abdominal injury with abdominal computed tomography (CT), diagnostic laparoscopy, or laparotomy at a Level I trauma center during a 3-year period to validate a previously derived prediction rule. The emergency physician providing care documented history and physical examination findings on a standardized data collection form before knowledge of the results of diagnostic imaging. The clinical prediction rule being evaluated included 6 "high-risk" variables, the presence of any of which indicated that the child was not at low risk for intra-abdominal injury: low age-adjusted systolic blood pressure, abdominal tenderness, femur fracture, increased liver enzyme levels (serum aspartate aminotransferase concentration>200 U/L or serum alanine aminotransferase concentration>125 U/L), microscopic hematuria (urinalysis>5 RBCs/high powered field), or an initialhematocrit level less than 30%.
RESULTS: One thousand three hundred twenty-four children with blunt torso trauma were enrolled, and 1,119 (85%) patients had the variables in the decision rule documented by the emergency physician and therefore made up the study sample. The prediction rule had the following test characteristics: sensitivity=149 of 157, 94.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]90.2% to 97.7%) and specificity=357 of 962, 37.1% (95% CI 34.0 to 40.3%). Three hundred sixty-five patients tested negative for the rule; thus, strict application would have resulted in a 33% reduction in abdominal CT scanning. Of the 8 patients with intra-abdominal injury not identified by the prediction rule, 1 underwent a laparotomy. This patient had a serosal tear and a mesenteric hematoma at laparotomy, neither of which required specific surgical intervention.
CONCLUSION: A clinical prediction rule consisting of 6 variables, easily available to clinicians in the ED, identifies most but not all children with intra-abdominal injury. Application of the prediction rule to this sample would have reduced the number of unnecessary abdominal CT scans performed but would have failed to identify 1 child undergoing (a nontherapeutic) laparotomy. Thus, further refinement of this prediction rule in a large, multicenter cohort is necessary before widespread implementation.
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Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA 95817-2282, USA. jfholmes@ucdavis.edu
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