Oral Presentations
LO92: Factors contributing to the development of adverse drug events treated in emergency departments
- S. Woo, A. Cragg, M.E. Wickham, C.R. Ackerley, D. Villanyi, F.X. Scheuermeyer, C.M. Hohl
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S59-S60
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Introduction: Adverse drug events (ADEs), unintended and harmful events associated with medications, commonly cause or contribute to emergency department (ED) presentations. Understanding provider, patient and system factors that contribute to their development may assist in developing effective preventative strategies. Our objective was to identify factors that contributed to the development of ADEs that caused ED presentations. Methods: We reviewed the charts of ADE patients enrolled in 1 of 3 prospective studies conducted in 3 tertiary care and 1 urban community ED. In the parent studies, researchers enrolled patients by applying a systematic selection algorithm to minimize selection bias, and physicians and pharmacists evaluated patients prospectively to evaluate the causal associations between the drug regimens and patient presentations. Subsequently, a research pharmacist and physician independently reviewed the charts of ADE patients from these cohorts, abstracting data using electronic forms. Reviewers recorded patient, provider and system factors that contributed to the development of ADEs. The main outcome was the presence of at least one contributing factor in the development of an ADE. We used descriptive statistics with appropriate measures of variance. The sample size was determined by enrolment into the primary studies. Results: We reviewed the charts of 670 patients diagnosed with 725 ADEs. We identified ≥1 contributing factors in 62% (95%CI 58-65%) of ADEs. Multiple contributing factors were present in 17% of ADEs (95%CI 13-20%). The most common contributing factors were inadequate patient counseling or instructions about medication use (15%), insufficient laboratory monitoring or follow-up of monitoring tests (12%), lack of staff education (7%), lack of provider adherence with recommended treatment guidelines (7%), and delayed or inadequate clinical reassessment after a medication change (6%). Provider errors in drug administration contributed to 0.3% of ADEs (95%CI 0.0-0.7). Conclusion: Contributing factors were identified for most ADEs. They were often related to inadequate counseling and follow-up, and were rarely the result of errors. Further research is required to understand how communication of medication instructions can be improved. Investments in technologies to reduce provider errors may not significantly reduce the numbers of ADE patients presenting to EDs.
LO93: Prognostic value of S-100B protein for prediction of post-concussion symptoms following a mild traumatic brain injury: systematic review and meta-analysis
- E. Mercier, P. Tardif, P. Cameron, B. Batomen Kuimi, M. Émond, L. Moore, B. Mitra, J. Frenette, É. De Guise, M. Ouellet, M. Bordeleau, N. Le Sage
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S60
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Introduction: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a major cause of morbidity but there are no validated tools to help clinicians predict post-concussion symptoms. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to determine the prognostic value of S-100B protein to predict post-concussion symptoms following a mTBI in adults. Methods: The protocol of this systematic review was registered with the PROSPERO database (CRD42016032578). A search strategy was performed on seven databases (CINAHL, Cochrane CENTRAL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, Web of Knowledge, PyscBITE, PsycINFO) from their inception to October 2016. Studies evaluating the association between S-100B protein level and post-concussion symptoms assessed at least seven days after the mTBI were eligible. Individual patient data were requested. Studies eligibility assessment, data extraction and risk of bias assessment were performed independently by two researchers. Analyses were done following the meta-analysis using individual participant data or summary aggregate data guidelines from the Cochrane Methodology Review Group. Results: Outcomes were dichotomised as persistent (≥3 months) or early (≥7 days <3 months). Our search strategy yielded 23,298 citations of which 29 studies presenting between seven and 223 patients (n=2505) were included. Post-concussion syndrome (PCS) (16 studies), neuropsychological symptoms (9 studies) and health-related quality of life (4 studies) were the most frequently presented outcomes. The S-100B protein serum level of patients with no PCS was similar to that of patients experiencing persistent PCS (mean difference 0.00 [-0.05, 0.04]) or early PCS (mean difference 0.03 [-0.02, 0.08]). The odds of having persistent PCS (OR 0.56 (95% CI: 0.29-1.10) or early PCS (OR 1.67 (95% CI: 0.98-2.85) in patients with an elevated S-100B protein serum level was not significantly different from that of patients with normal values. No meta-analysis was performed for other outcomes than PCS due to heterogeneity and small samples. Studies’ overall risk of bias was considered moderate. Conclusion: Results suggest that the prognostic value of S-100B protein serum level to predict persistent and early post-concussion symptoms is limited. Variability in injury to S-100B protein sample time and outcomes assessed could potentially explain the lack of association and needs further evaluation.
LO94: Prognostic value of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) for prediction of post-concussion symptoms following a mild traumatic brain injury: a systematic review
- E. Mercier, P. Tardif, P. Cameron, M. Émond, L. Moore, B. Mitra, M. Ouellet, J. Frenette, É. De Guise, N. Le Sage
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S60
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Introduction: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is an understudied worldwide health problem and a socio-economic burden that remains a major cause of morbidity. However, there is no prognostication tool to help clinicians predict the occurrence of post-concussion symptoms. This systematic review aimed to determine the prognostic value of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) to predict post-concussion symptoms following a mTBI in adults. Methods: The protocol of this systematic review was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) database (registration number CRD42016033683). Seven databases (CINAHL, Cochrane CENTRAL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycBITE, PsycINFO, Web of Knowledge/Biosis) were searched for cohort studies evaluating the association between NSE levels and post-concussion symptoms assessed at least seven days after the mild TBI. Grey literature was also screened using databases on dissertations and theses as well as abstracts from relevant congresses. Two researchers independently screened studies for inclusion, extracted data, and appraised their quality using the Quality in Prognostic Studies (QUIPS) tool from the Cochrane Collaboration Group. Results: Our search strategy yielded a total of 23,298 citations from which eight cohorts presented in 10 studies were included. Studies included between 45 and 141 patients (total=608 patients). The most frequently assessed outcomes were post-concussion syndrome (PCS) (13 assessments), neuropsychological disorders (10 assessments), return to work or sick leave (2 assessments) and Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) (2 assessments). No association was found between an elevated NSE serum level and the occurrence of PCS. Of the 33 outcomes assessments performed, only three showed an association between a higher level of serum NSE and a post-concussion symptom (alteration of at least three cognitive domains at 2 weeks, standardised physician assessment at 6 weeks and headache at 6 months following a mild TBI). Included studies’ overall risk of bias was considered moderate. Conclusion: Results of this systematic review conclude that based on current levels of evidence, serum NSE levels alone do not provide prognostic information on persistent or early post-concussion symptoms after a mTBI.
LO95: A prospective evaluation of mild traumatic brain injuries in a working population in Edmonton, AB
- L. Gaudet, L. Eliyahu, J. Lowes, J. Beach, M. Mrazik, G. Cummings, K. Latoszek, L. Carroll, B.R. Holroyd, B.H. Rowe
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S61
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Introduction: Patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) frequently present to the emergency department (ED); however, wide variation in diagnosis and management has been demonstrated in this setting. Sub-optimal mTBI management can contribute to post-concussion syndrome (PCS), affecting vocational outcomes like return to work. This study documented the work-related events, ED management, discharge advice, and outcomes for employed patients presenting to the ED with mTBI. Methods: Adult (>17 years) patients presenting to one of three urban EDs in Edmonton, Alberta with Glasgow coma scale score ≥13 within 72 hours of a concussive event were recruited by on-site research assistants. Follow-up calls ascertained outcomes, including symptoms and their severity, advice received in the ED, and adherence to discharge instructions, at 30 and 90 days after ED discharge. Dichotomous variables were analyzed using chi-square testing; continuous variables were compared using t-tests or Mann-Whitney tests, as appropriate. Work-related injury and return to work outcomes were modelled using logistic or linear regression, as appropriate. Results: Overall, 250 patents were enrolled; 172 (69%) were employed at the time of their injury and completed at least one follow-up. The median age was 37 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 24, 49.5), both sexes were equally represented (48% male), and work-related concussions were uncommon (16%). Work-related concussion was related to manual labor jobs and self-reported history of attention deficit disorder. Patients often received advice to avoid sports (81%) and/or work (71%); however, the duration of recommended time off varied. Most employed patients (80%) missed at least one day of work (median=7 days; IQR: 3, 14); 91% of employees returned to work by 90 days, despite 41% reporting persistent symptoms. Increased days of missed work were linked to divorce, history of sleep disorder, and physician’s advice to avoid work. Conclusion: While work-related concussions are uncommon, most employees who sustain a mTBI at any time miss some work. Many patients experience mTBI symptoms past 90 days, which has serious implications for workers’ abilities to fulfill their work duties and risk of subsequent injury. Workers, employers, and the workers compensation system should take the necessary precautions to ensure that workers return to work safely and successfully following a concussion.
LO96: Syncope prognosis based on emergency department diagnosis: a prospective cohort study
- C. Toarta, M.A. Mukarram, K. Arcot, S. Kim, S. Gaudet, M. Sivilotti, B.H. Rowe, V. Thiruganasambandamoorthy
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S61
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Introduction: Relatively little is known about outcomes after disposition among syncope patients assigned various diagnostic categories during emergency department (ED) evaluation. We sought to measure the 30-day serious outcomes among 4 diagnostic groups (vasovagal, orthostatic hypotension, cardiac, other/unknown) within 30 days of the index ED visit. Methods: We prospectively enrolled adult syncope patients at six EDs and excluded patients with pre-syncope, persistent mental status changes, intoxication, seizure, and major trauma. Patient characteristics, ED management, diagnostic impression (vasovagal, orthostatic, cardiac, or other/unknown) at the end of the ED visit and physicians’ confidence in assigning the etiology were collected. Serious outcomes at 30-days included: death, arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, structural heart disease, pulmonary embolism, and hemorrhage. Results: 5,010 patients (mean age 53.4 years; 54.8% females) were enrolled; 3.5% suffered serious outcomes: deaths (0.3%), arrhythmias (1.8%), non-arrhythmic cardiac (0.5%) and non-cardiac (0.9%). The cause of syncope was determined as vasovagal among 53.3% and cardiac in 5.4% of patients. The proportion of patients with ED investigations (p<0.001) and short-term serious outcomes increased (p<0.01) increased in each diagnostic category in the following order: vasovagal, orthostatic hypotension, other/unknown cause and cardiac. No deaths occurred in patients with vasovagal syncope. A higher proportion of all serious outcomes occurred among patients suspected of cardiac syncope in the ED (p<0.01). Confidence was highest among physicians for a vasovagal syncope diagnosis and lowest when the cause was other/unknown. Conclusion: Short-term serious outcomes strongly correlated with the etiology assigned in the ED visit. The physician’s clinical judgment should be incorporated in risk-stratification for prognostication and safe management of ED syncope patients.
LO97: Validation of the HEART score in Canadian emergency department chest pain patients using a high-sensitivity troponin T assay
- J. Andruchow, A. McRae, T. Abedin, D. Wang, G. Innes, E. Lang
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S61-S62
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Introduction: The HEART score is a validated tool created to risk stratify emergency department (ED) chest pain patients using 5 simple criteria (History, ECG findings, Age, Risk factors, and Troponin). Several studies have demonstrated the superiority of HEART over other well known risk stratification tools in identifying low risk chest pain patients suitable for early discharge. All but one of these studies used conventional troponin assays, and most were conducted in European populations. This study aims to validate the HEART score using a high-sensitivity troponin T assay in a Canadian population. Methods: This prospective cohort study was conducted at a single urban tertiary centre and regional percutaneous coronary intervention site in Calgary, Alberta. Patients were eligible for enrolment if they presented to the ED with chest pain, were age 25-years or older and required biomarker testing to rule out AMI at the discretion of the attending emergency physician. Patients were excluded if they had clear acute ischemic ECG changes, new arrhythmia or renal failure requiring hemodialysis. Clinical data were recorded by the emergency physician at the time of enrolment and outcomes were obtained from administrative data. High-sensitivity troponin-T (Roche Elecsys hs-cTnT) results were obtained in all patients at presentation. The primary outcome was AMI within 30-days of ED visit, the secondary outcome was 30-day major adverse cardiac events (MACE). Results: A total of 984 ED patients with complete HEART scores were enrolled from August 2014 to September 2016. The 30-day incidence of AMI and MACE in the overall population was 3.3% and 20.6%, respectively. HEART scores were predictive of 30-day AMI incidence: low risk (0-3): 0.77% (95%CI 0.0-1.5%), moderate risk (4-6): 4.3% (95%CI 2.3-6.2%) and high risk (7-10): 12.2% (95%CI 5.5-19.0%). HEART scores also predicted 30-day MACE: low risk (0-3): 5.0% (95%CI 3.1-6.9%), moderate risk (4-6): 31.8% (95%CI 27.2-36.4%) and high-risk (7-10): 61.4% (95%CI 51.2-71.5%). More than half of patients, 522 (53.0%) could be identified as low risk based on the HEART score using a single troponin result. Conclusion: Using a single high-sensitivity troponin result collected at ED presentation, the HEART score can rapidly and effectively identify more than half of ED chest pain patients as low risk for 30-day AMI, but is less sensitive for 30-day MACE.
LO98: Optimal length of observation for emergency department patients with syncope: a time to event analysis
- V. Thiruganasambandamoorthy, M. Sivilotti, M.A. Mukarram, C. Leafloor, K. Arcot, G.A. Wells, B.H. Rowe, A. Krahn, L. Huang, M. Taljaard
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S62
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Introduction: Concern for occult serious conditions leads to variations in ED syncope management [hospitalization, duration of ED/inpatient monitoring including Syncope Observation Units (SOU) for prolonged monitoring]. We sought to develop evidence-based recommendations for duration of ED/post-ED ECG monitoring using the Canadian Syncope Risk Score (CSRS) by assessing the time to serious adverse event (SAE) occurrence. Methods: We enrolled adults with syncope at 6 EDs and collected demographics, time of syncope and ED arrival, CSRS predictors and time of SAE. We stratified patients as per the CSRS (low, medium and high risk as ≤0, 1-3 and ≥4 respectively). 30-day adjudicated SAEs included death, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, structural heart disease, pulmonary embolism or serious hemorrhage. We categorized arrhythmias, interventions for arrhythmias and death from unknown cause as arrhythmic SAE and the rest as non-arrhythmic SAE. We performed Kaplan-Meier analysis using time of ED registration for primary and time of syncope for secondary analyses. Results: 5,372 patients (mean age 54.3 years, 54% females, and 13.7% hospitalized) were enrolled with 538 (10%) patients suffering SAE (0.3% died due to an unknown cause and 0.5% suffered ventricular arrhythmia). 64.8% of SAEs occurred within 6 hours of ED arrival. The probability for any SAE or arrhythmia was highest within 2-hours of ED arrival for low-risk patients (0.65% and 0.31%; dropped to 0.54% and 0.06% after 2-hours) and within 6-hours for the medium and high-risk patients (any SAE 6.9% and 17.4%; arrhythmia 6.5% and 18.9% respectively) which also dropped after 6-hours (any SAE 0.99% and 2.92%; arrhythmia 0.78% and 3.07% respectively). For any CSRS threshold, the risk of arrhythmia was highest within the first 15-days (for CSRS ≥2 patients 15.6% vs. 0.006%). ED monitoring for 2-hours (low-risk) and 6-hours (medium and high-risk) and using a CSRS ≥2 cut-off for outpatient 15-day ECG monitoring will lead to 52% increase in arrhythmia detection. The majority (82.2%) arrived to the ED within 2-hours (median time 1.1 hours) and secondary analysis yielded similar results. Conclusion: Our study found 2 and 6 hours of ED monitoring for low-risk and medium/high-risk CSRS patients respectively, with 15-day outpatient ECG monitoring for CSRS ≥2 patients will improve arrhythmia detection without the need for hospitalization or observation units.
Grizzly Den Presentations
GD01: Age-adjusted D-dimer and two-site compression point-of-care ultrasonography to rule out acute deep vein thrombosis
- K. Alqaydi, L. Robichaud, D. Hamad, X. Xue, J. Turner, M. Afilalo
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S62
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Introduction: Undiagnosed deep vein thrombosis (DVT) can lead to significant morbidity and mortality, including death from DVT-associated massive pulmonary embolism (PE). While several validated clinical prediction rules, blood test and imaging modalities exist to investigate a potential DVT, there is currently a lack of rapid, accessible and reliable methods to exclude the possibility of DVT without resorting to formal venous duplex scanning. Currently, the use in the ED of a validated clinical prediction rule combined to either a high-sensitivity D-dimer test or ultrasonography of the lower extremities has a poor predictive value, as 75-90% of patients suspected of DVT have a negative formal venous duplex scan. Compression bedside ultrasound has however recently been shown to be a safe, rapid and accurate method for the diagnosis of proximal DVT in the emergency department with a high sensitivity and specificity (combined sensitivity and specificity of 96.1% and 96.8%, respectively1). Research question: In the present study, we will primarily assess whether two-site compression POCUS combined with a negative age-adjusted D-dimer test can accurately rule out DVT in ED patients regardless of the Wells criteria. Methods: This is a single-center, prospective, observational study carried out over one year in the Emergency Department of the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, Quebec. We aim to enroll a convenience sample of 475 patients aged 18 years and older presenting to the ED with symptoms suggestive of a DVT. All enrolled patients will receive the standard of care required for a lower leg DVT presentation. After calculating Patients DVT risk using modified wells criteria, all patients will undergo POCUS for DVT followed by a D-dimer test. Based on their results, patients will either undergo formal duplex scanning, or will be discharged without further testing and receive a three-month phone follow-up. A true negative lower leg DVT will be defined as follows: (1) Negative follow-up phone questionnaire for patients who were sent home with no formal duplex venous scanning. (2) Negative formal duplex venous scanning for patients who were deemed likely to have lower leg DVT using the Wells score, with a negative D-dimer and POCUS. Age adjusted DVT was added to account for below knee DVT and avoid the need for patients to return for fellow up duplex study in 1 week. To estimate our technique’s sensitivity with a 4% margin of error with 95% confidence intervals, 92 confirmed DVT patients are needed. We expect to recruit a total 475 patients within one-year period at the JGH (95 DVT-positive patients and 380 DVT-negative patients). Impact: The use of compression bedside ultrasound with a negative age-adjusted D-dimer test to rule out DVT in the ED may accelerate the decision regarding patient disposition and significantly decrease the length of patient stay in the ED. In addition, it may help avoid unnecessary medical interventions and diagnostic tests, thus representing potential quality of care and cost-saving improvements as well.
GD02: An international consensus study to identify quality indicators for ambulatory emergency care
- S. Berthelot, E. Lang, M. Émond, M. Mallet, H. T. Stelfox, R. Lavergne, F. Légaré, L. Bissonnette, S. Blais, J-C Forest, E. Mercier, C. Guimont, L. Moore
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S62-S63
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Introduction: Redirecting low acuity patients from emergency departments to primary care walk-in clinics has been identified as a priority by many health authorities. Promoting family physicians for the management of ambulatory patients with urgent health concerns reflects the assumption that primary care facilities can offer high-quality and more affordable ambulatory emergency care. However, no performance assessment framework has been developed for ambulatory emergency care and consequently, quality of care provided in these alternate settings has never been formally compared. Primary objective: To identify structure, process and outcome indicators for ambulatory emergency care. Methods: We will identify and develop quality indicators (QIs) for ambulatory emergency care using a RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method (RAM) composed of three different steps. First, we will perform a scoping literature review to inventory 1) all previously recommended QIs assessing care provided to ambulatory emergency patients in the ED or the primary care settings; 2) all conditions evaluated with the retrieved QIs; and 3) all outcomes measured by the same QIs. Second, a steering committee composed of the research team and of international experts in performance assessment in emergency and primary care will be presented with the lists of QI-related conditions and outcomes. They will be asked to identify potential outcome indicators for ambulatory emergency care by generating any relevant combinations of one condition and one outcome (e.g. acute asthma exacerbation/re-consultation). Committee members will be given the latitude to use and pair any conditions or outcomes not included in the lists as long as they think the resulting indicators are compatible with the study objectives. Using a structured nominal group approach, they will combine their suggestions and refine the list of potential QIs. This list of potential outcome indicators composed of pairs “condition/outcome” will be merged with the list of already published QIs identified during the literature review. Third, as per the RAM standards, we will assemble an international multidisciplinary panel (n=20) of patients, emergency and primary care providers, researchers and decision makers, after recommendations from international emergency and primary care associations, and from the Canadian Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR) Support Units. Through iterative rounds of ratings using both web-based survey tools and videoconferencing, panelists will independently assess all candidate QIs. They will be asked to rate on a nine-level scale to what extent each QI is a relevant and useful measure of ambulatory emergency care quality. From one round to the next, QIs with a median panelist rating score of one to three will be excluded. Those with a median score of seven or more will be automatically included in the final list. QIs with median score of four to six will be retained for future deliberations among the panelists. Rounds of ratings will be conducted until all QIs are classified. Impact: The QIs identified will be used to develop a performance assessment framework for ambulatory emergency care. This will represent an essential step toward testing the assumption that EDs and primary care walk-in clinics provide equivalent care quality to low acuity patients.
GD03: Hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan) versus acetaminophen for non-surgical abdominal pain in children: a randomized controlled superiority trial
- N. Poonai, A. Butter, D. Ashok, M. Rieder, S. Ali
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S63
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Background: Children with abdominal pain in the emergency department (ED) are at particular risk of suboptimal analgesia due to fears of missing appendicitis and absent guidelines. Many still experience pain at discharge. Acetaminophen is the most commonly used analgesic and efficacy of hyoscine butylbromide (HBB) is supported by adult evidence. However, no evidence exists for either agent in children with abdominal pain. Objective: To determine if HBB is superior to acetaminophen for abdominal pain in children. Methods: We will consecutively recruit children 8-17 years presenting to the ED with presumed non-surgical abdominal pain rated >4/10 on the Faces Pain Scale – Revised (FPS-R) and described as colicky, excluding:-Suspected appendicitis or bowel obstruction-Anticholinergic, analgesic, or antispasmodic <12 hours-Peritoneal inflammation-Unable to swallow pills-Hypersensitivity to either intervention-Medically unstable-Previous bowel obstruction, abdominal surgery, myasthenia gravis, liver disease, glaucoma, or recent abdominal trauma (<48 hours)-Toxin ingestion (<24 hours)-Vomiting-Pregnancy Randomization and allocation concealment will be pharmacy-controlled and performed using a computerized random number generator and sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed envelopes, respectively. The physician, research assistant, nurse, and participant will be blinded. Due to perceptible differences, participants will be randomized in a double-dummy approach to:-HBB 10 mg tablet + acetaminophen placebo OR-Acetaminophen 15 mg/kg liquid (maximum 975 mg) + HBB placebo. The primary outcome will be the difference from baseline on the FPS-R at 120 minutes, reflecting HBB’s time to peak plasma concentration. The FPS-R has been validated in children >five years. Secondary outcomes include:-Pain scores at 15, 30, 45, 60, 80, 100, and 120 minutes post-intervention (FPS-R and 100 mm visual analog scale)-Discharge pain score-Rescue analgesia-Time to achieve a 20% reduction in pain-Adverse effects-Recidivism <48 hours-Missed surgical diagnoses (National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS) database)-Caregiver satisfaction (five-item Likert scale). Using the intention to treat principle, ordinal, ratio, and categorical data will be analyzed using the Mann-Whitney, paired t-test, and Pearson’s chi-square, respectively and summarized using 95% confidence intervals. Assuming a standard deviation of 2 faces, 83 children per group will be required to detect a 1-face difference at 5% significance with 90% power. Increasing by 20% equals 100 participants per group. P values <0.05 will be considered significant. An institutional audit revealed 380 eligible patients per year during research assistant availability. Given a 30% refusal rate, we expect five participants enrolled per week for 40 weeks. Importance: Our findings will guide evidence-based analgesic choices for children with non-surgical abdominal pain in the ED.
GD04: A blinded, randomized controlled trial of opioid analgesics for the management of acute fracture pain in older adults discharged from the emergency department
- C. Varner, S. McLeod, A. Orkin, D. Melady, B. Borgundvaag
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- 15 May 2017, pp. S63-S64
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Background: Emergency department (ED) providers are frequently challenged with how best to treat acute pain in older patients, specifically when non-opioid analgesics are ineffective or contraindicated. Studies have documented older patients presenting to the ED with painful conditions are less likely to receive pain medications than younger patients, and this oligoanalgesia has been associated with increased risk of delirium and longer hospital stays. Given the concerns for drug interactions, side effects, over-sedation and addiction, emergency physicians often report uncertainty regarding the ideal choice of opioid analgesic in older adults. There are no guidelines informing best practice for the management of acute pain in this population. Objective: The primary objective is to compare the efficacy of codeine, oxycodone and hydromorphone for acute fracture pain in older patients discharged from the ED. Methods: This will be a blinded, randomized controlled trial of older adults (age>70) discharged home from the ED with acute pain secondary to an upper extremity, lower extremity, rib, pelvic or vertebral compression fracture. Patients will be randomized to receive a 3-day supply of codeine, oxycodone or hydromorphone. Patients will also be given acetaminophen. Patients will be contacted by phone or email 3 days following their ED visit. The primary outcome will be differences in pain scores at 3 days assessed using the validated Brief Pain Inventory (Short Form). Secondary outcomes will include side effects (ie: confusion, constipation), adverse events (ie: falls, healthcare visits) and pain interference with daily activity. Patients, physicians and all research staff will be blinded to group allocation. Data Analysis Plan: The study design assumed three arms (codeine, oxycodone and hydromorphone), therefore the 2-tailed alpha will be set to 0.025 to adjust for the increased risk of type-I error with 3 pairwise comparisons. To test for pairwise equality between groups, a 1-way ANOVA will be employed. Proportional differences will be assessed using Pearson chi-square statistic. Sample size calculation: Assuming a mean (SD) change in pain scores between groups of 2.2 (3.0), a minimum clinically important difference on the Brief Pain Inventory of 2.0, a 2-tailed alpha of 0.025 to adjust for 3 pairwise comparisons and a beta of 0.20, we estimate that 47 patients per group (N=141) will be required. To account for potential loss to follow-up, we will increase our sample size by 25% per group, resulting in a final sample size of 177 patients (59 per group). Importance: All analgesics (including opioids) prescribed to older adults are associated with risk of adverse events. This study seeks to inform ED providers of opioid efficacy, side effects and patient-important, functional outcomes in this growing patient population.
GD05: Careful Anticoagulation Review in Emergency Medicine (CARe-EM)
- K. de Wit, M. Mercuri, A. Worster
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- 15 May 2017, p. S64
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Background: The number of patients prescribed anticoagulation for stroke prevention is increasing, along with the proportion of emergency department (ED) patients who are anticoagulant users. Bleeding is the most common side effect. Inappropriate dosing, co-prescription of anti-inflammatories or aspirin, and renal impairment all increase the bleeding risk. An ED visit is an opportunity to review anticoagulant bleeding risks and intervene to prevent bleeding in patients at high risk. Objectives: To establish the 12-month incidence of bleeding in anticoagulated patients visiting the ED, to develop an ED specific anticoagulant-associated bleeding prediction score, to evaluate the ED utility of existing prediction scores. Methods: Research ethics board approval has been granted. Patients will be identified in Hamilton General and Juravinski EDs. Each patient will be followed forward in time for 12 months to document bleeding events. Population: Inclusion criteria: ED patients prescribed warfarin, rivaroxaban, dabigatran, apixaban, edoxaban or low molecular weight heparin (prevalent users). Exclusion criteria: Patients under 16 years of age. Primary outcome: The incidence of major bleeding (defined by ISTH criteria) within 12 months from the index ED visit. Secondary outcomes: Derivation of an ED prediction score to identify patients at high risk of anticoagulant-associated bleeding within 12 months. Tertiary outcomes: Evaluation of ATRIA, modified HAS-BLED and HEMORR2HAGES scores utility in predicting bleeding within 12 months. Data management: The data will be stored anonymously and securely on RedCAP. A literature search/expert discussion has identified multiple potential risk factors for bleeding. This data is collected at the time of the index ED presentation. A committee of emergency, thrombosis, gastroenterology and cardiology physicians will review each major bleeding case. Analysis: Primary analysis: a multiple logistic regression analysis to identify variables associated with major bleeding diagnosed within 12 months of the index presentation. Using the model β coefficients we will derive a simple clinical decision rule. Secondary analysis: assessing the area under the curve and optimal cut points for pre-existing bleeding prediction scores for predicting major bleeding within 12 months. Sample size calculation: With 3000 patients we expect 2700 to be anticoagulated long term, and at least 135/2700 patients will have a major bleed. This is a sufficient number for multivariate analysis to establish a simple model. We estimate 20,000 anticoagulated ED patient attendances/year. Importance: This is the first study to consider the ED visit an opportunity to prevent bleeding. We will establish a method to identify ED patients at high risk of anticoagulant-associated bleeding.
GD06: Derivation and internal validation of a clinical prognostic tool for recurrent emergency visits for hyperglycemia in patients with diabetes mellitus: a multicentre prospective cohort study
- J. Yan, K. Gushulak, T. Spaic, S. Liu, L. Siddiqi, K. van Aarsen, S. McLeod, D. Eagles, B. Borgundvaag, I. G. Stiell
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S64-S65
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Background: Patients with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus (DM) often visit the emergency department (ED) for management of hyperglycemic episodes, including diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS). It has been previously reported that risk factors for readmission to the intensive care unit (ICU) in DKA include older age, female sex and the presence of significant comorbidity including sepsis. However, there are no ED-based studies on this topic, particularly in a Canadian setting, and data on outcomes such as recurrent ED visits, hospital or ICU admission after discharge in these patients is lacking. Objectives: The primary objective of this study is to derive and internally validate a clinical risk tool for prognosis of patients presenting with hyperglycemic emergencies to identify those at higher risk of adverse outcomes within 30 days of initial ED presentation. Methods: This will be a multicentre prospective cohort study of eligible consecutive adult patients with an ED diagnosis of hyperglycemia, DKA or HHS. We will include all visits of adult (≥18 years) ED patients with either a known or unknown history of DM and a diagnosis of hyperglycemia (blood glucose >11.0 mmol/L), DKA or HHS. We will include patients with co-morbid diagnoses in addition to hyperglycemia. We will exclude patients: a) with advanced care directives for resuscitation involving refusal of treatment, and b) who are initially assessed at a peripheral hospital and transferred to our sites for ongoing management. Research assistants will then contact the enrolled participants via telephone for follow-up regarding clinical outcomes, including repeat visits to see a health care provider, changes in diabetic medications, and time taken off of work or school. Participants will be followed to determine if they have further ED visits, admissions or ICU admissions after their ED visit for hyperglycemia. Data on missed patients or those who refused consent will be collected to assess for selection/enrolment bias. Statistical considerations: The primary outcome will be an unplanned return ED visit for hyperglycemia within 30 days of initial presentation. Secondary outcomes will include unplanned admission to hospital or ICU for hyperglycemia, or death within 30 days of the index ED visit. Additionally, we hope to characterize patient-important and health-care system outcomes such as time taken off work or school and follow-up visits to see a healthcare provider. We will conduct descriptive statistics on investigations, treatments, disposition and patient-important outcomes. We will perform an initial univariate logistic regression, followed by a multivariate analysis to identify predictor variables associated with adverse events such as recurrent ED visits, and admission to hospital or ICU for hyperglycemia within 30 days. We will include individual patients who have multiple recurrent visits to the ED during the study period and statistically weight for these using generalized estimating equations (GEE), which are used to develop regression models for correlated data that arise from repeated measures of the same individuals over time. Finally, a clinical risk tool will be derived by rounding the beta co-efficients. Internal validation will be conducted using bootstrapping techniques. Importance: ED visits for hyperglycemia significantly affect both the healthcare system overall and the individual patient. The results of this project will assist clinicians to better identify these patients and enable them to intervene either medically or educationally to prevent subsequent visits to the ED. As a result, patients will have improved care, better blood glucose control, and be identified for closer follow-up with a family physician or diabetes specialist. Furthermore, by aiming to reduce the number of recurrent visits, this project may reduce ED utilization and the associated healthcare costs with frequent visits and admissions for hyperglycemia.
Moderated Poster Presentations
MP01: The canary in the coal mine: Does palliative care consultation influence emergency department utilization?
- Z. Polsky, E. Lang, A. Sinnarajah, T. Fung, B. Thomas
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S65
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Introduction: For cancer patients undergoing active treatment, emergency department (ED) visits may be an indicator of a breakdown in continuity and quality of care. Palliative care (PC) may be an important resource for patients in need of symptom management even during treatment with curative intent. This study aims to describe ED utilization by cancer patients and determine if PC consults impact ED use. Methods: Patient data from the Tom Baker Cancer Center (TBCC) was linked to PC and ED data as a retrospective cohort study. ED data was obtained from two administrative databases and PC data was obtained from four administrative databases and restricted to the first four hundred days following diagnosis. Univariate and Multivariate analyses were used. Results: Three actively treated cancer patient cohorts were identified based on first presentation following intake at the TBCC: 1) Used ED first (n=1637), 2) Used PC first (n=539), and 3) Only used services at the TBCC (n=2153). Using Multivariate analysis, patients living alone or who had a diagnosis of prostate or breast cancer were more likely to access the ED first or to only use services at the TBCC rather than access PC first. Patients who were divorced, on income support, or diagnosed with a lung or GI cancer, were more likely to access PC first rather than access the ED or only use services at the TBCC. A subgroup analysis was performed on those who accessed the ED at some point during their care, consisting of three groups: 1) ED Only Users (n=1091), 2) ED First Users, who also accessed PC (n=546), and 3) PC First Users, who also accessed the ED. There was a significant difference in rates of ED visits between the three groups: ED Only Users went to the ED at a rate of 3.8 per 1000 patient days; ED First Users, who also accessed PC, went to the ED at a rate of 7.7 per 1000 patient days; and PC First Users, who also accessed the ED, went to the ED at a rate of 9.2 per 1000 patient days (p< 0.001). Conclusion: In a tertiary cancer centre, patients who were divorced, on income support, or diagnosed with lung or GI cancer were more likely to access PC. Amongst those patients who presented to the ED, those who accessed PC first had higher rates of ED use. Further explorations of presenting complaints, utilization patterns, and symptom burdens will be analyzed to determine if early PC consults can influence or decrease ED utilization.
MP02: Paramedic safety culture across Eastern Ontario
- J.E. Sinclair, P. Price, M.A. Austin, A. Reed, E.S. Kwok
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S65
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Introduction: Safety culture is defined as the shared beliefs that an organization’s employees hold relative to workplace safety. Perceptions of workplace safety culture within paramedic services have been shown to be associated with patient and provider safety outcomes as well as safe work practices. We sought to characterize paramedics’ perceptions of the organizational safety culture across Eastern Ontario, Canada to provide important benchmarking data to evaluate future quality initiatives. Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey study conducted September 2015-January 2016 in 7 paramedic services across Eastern Ontario. We distributed an abridged version of Patterson’s previously published EMS-SAQ survey, measuring six domains of workplace safety culture, to 1,066 paramedics during continuing medical education sessions. The questions were presented for rating on a 5 point Likert scale (1=strongly agree, 5= strongly disagree) and a response of 1 or 2 was considered a ‘positive perception’ response. We present descriptive statistics and chi-square tests where appropriate. Results: We received responses from 1,041 paramedics (97.6%), with a response rate varying between 88.0% and 100% across the 8 paramedic services. One third (33.6%) were Advanced Care Paramedics (ACPs) and 39.4% of paramedics had more than 10 years’ experience. The percentage of positive responses for each domain were: Safety Climate 31.2% (95% CI 28.4-34.1), Teamwork Climate 29.3% (95% CI 26.6-32.1), Stress Recognition 56.8% (95% CI 53.8-59.8), Perceptions of Management 67.0% (95% CI 64.0-69.8), Working Conditions 42.6% (95% CI 39.6-45.7), Job Satisfaction 41.6% (95% CI 38.6-44.6). Primary care paramedics had more positive perception responses for Job Satisfaction (45% vs 35%, p=0.002), whereas ACPs had more positive perception responses for Stress Recognition (61.5% vs 54.1%, p=0.022). No association was found between gender or years of experience and a positive perception of any safety domain. Conclusion: The results provide valuable workplace safety culture data that will be used to target and evaluate needed quality improvement initiatives while also raising some awareness to paramedics of important factors related to patient and provider safety.
MP03: Predicting survival after pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
- I. Drennan, K. Thorpe, S. Cheskes, M. Mamdani, D. Scales, A. Guerguerian, L.J. Morrison
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S65-S66
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Introduction: Pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is unique in terms of epidemiology, treatment, and outcomes. There is a paucity of literature examining predictors of survival to help guide resuscitation in this population. Objective: The primary objective was to examine predictors of survival to hospital discharge. The secondary objective was to determine the probability of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) over the duration of resuscitation. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of non-traumatic OHCA (<18 years) treated by EMS from the Toronto Regional RescuNET Epistry-Cardiac Arrest database from 2006 to 2015. We used competing risk analysis to calculate the probability of ROSC over the duration of resuscitation. We then used multivariable logistic regression to examine the role of Utstein factors and duration of resuscitation in predicting survival to hospital discharge. Candidate variables were limited to Utstein factors and duration of resuscitation due to the number of events. We used area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC) to determine the predictive ability of our logistic regression model. Results: A total of 658 patients met inclusion criteria. Survival to discharge was 10.2% with 70.1% of those children having a good neurologic outcome. The overall median time to ROSC was 23.9 min. (IQR 15.0,36.7). However, the median time to ROSC for survivors was significantly shorter than the time to ROSC for patients who died in hospital (15.9 (IQR 10.6 to 22.8) vs. 33.2 (IQR 22.0 to 48.6); P value <0.001). There was a decrease in the odds of survival of 14% per minute during the first 25 minutes of cardiac arrest. Older age (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.86,0.99), and longer duration of resuscitation (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.88,0.93) were associated with worse outcome while initial shockable rhythm (OR 5.8, 95% CI 2.0,16.5), and witnessed arrests (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.10,5.30) were associated with improved patient outcome. The AUC for the Utstein factors was fair (0.77). Including duration of resuscitation improved the discrimination of the model to 0.85. Conclusion: Inclusion of duration of resuscitation improved the performance of our model compared to Utstein factors alone. However, our results suggest there are a number of other important factors for predicting patient outcome from pediatric OHCA.
MP04: Interim analysis of the impact of the Emergency Department Transformation System on ambulance offload delay
- S. Pawa, K. Van Aarsen, A. Dukelow, D. Lizotte, M. Zheng
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S66
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Introduction: Emergency Department Systems Transformation (EDST) is a bundle of Toyota Production System based interventions implemented in two London, Canada tertiary care Emergency Departments (ED) between April 2014 and July 2016 to improve patient care by increasing value and reducing waste. Some of the 17 primary interventions included computerized physician order entry optimization, staff schedule realignment, physician scorecards, and a novel initial assessment process. Offload delays are associated with longer hospital length of stay and delayed admission, and may increase morbidity and mortality. Delays also result in fewer circulating ambulances in the community. CIHI sets a benchmark of 30 minutes as an acceptable offload target. It is possible that EDST may have impacted offload times. Methods: Middlesex-London EMS provided offload times. Data was collected from London Health Sciences Centre including daily ED visit volumes, ED occupancy, offload nursing hours, and site variation. A binomial logistic regression analysis was performed to determine the impact of interventions and confounding variables on the proportion of patients meeting CIHI benchmark. A chi-square analysis was done comparing proportion of patients meeting the benchmark in the first 3 months versus the last 3 months to identify overall impact of EDST to date. Results: Increased offload nursing hours had a positive impact (p<0.001) on the proportion of offload times meeting the CIHI benchmark while increased ED visit volume and hospital inpatient volume had a significant negative impact (p<0.001). At both ED sites, the proportion of patients meeting the offload target ranged from 58-83% over the timeframe. There was a significant increase in the proportion of patients meeting the benchmark from the first quarter to the last quarter (69.6% vs 75.0%; 95% CI 3.45% to 7.38%, p=0.000). Specific interventions had varying degrees of impact on offload times. Conclusion: The proportion of patients meeting the benchmark offload time varied over the study timeframe but significantly increased with EDST implementation. Offload times are one of many outcomes we aim to improve with EDST and it remains an ongoing process as new interventions continue to be implemented. Once transformation is complete, future studies will focus on the impact of EDST on all ED flow metrics, and patient and provider satisfaction.
MP05: Do emergency department staff use a current domestic violence documentation tool or other forms of intimate partner violence documentation in patient records?
- J. Vonkeman, P.R. Atkinson, J. Fraser, R. McCloskey
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S66
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Introduction: Domestic violence (DV) rates in smaller cities been reported to be some of the highest in Canada. It is highly likely that emergency department staff will come across victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) in their daily practice. The purpose of this study is to better understand current practices for detecting IPV as we are currently uncertain whether patients are assessed for IPV and what the current documentation practices are. Methods: A standardized retrospective chart review, following principles outlined by Gilbert et al. 1996, was completed by two researchers to capture domestic violence documentation rates in patients presenting to the ED between January and April 2015 with injuries that may have been caused by IPV. To assess self-reported documentation/questioning practices, a cross-sectional online survey was distributed to ED staff via staff email lists three times between July and October 2016, with a response rate of 45.9% (n=55). The primary outcome was DV field usage. Secondary outcomes included documentation in patient charts and current questioning habits. Results: Overall, we found documentation in 4.64% of all included patient charts (n=366). No documentation was noted in the DV field. 52.4% patients with deliberate injuries had no documentation of assailant identity. With regards to self reported documentation practices, 16.4% of ED staff never questioned female patients about intimate partner violence, 83.6% asked when thought appropriate, and none asked routinely. None of the staff used a structured screening tool. 60% of ED staff documented their questioning but 92.7% did not use the DV-field for documentation. 58.2% of ED staff could not identify the DV field and 45.5% of respondents did not know how to interpret the DV field if positive. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that the current documentation tool (DV-field) is not being utilized. Furthermore, low rates of IPV documentation, and potentially questioning, in high risk patients indicates that there is need to improve current practises.
MP06: Use of ultrasound and x-ray to predict improvement in hip osteoarthritis symptoms following intra-articular steroid injection
- K. Steer, T. Nguyen, L. Woodhouse, G. Bostick, B. Smith, J. McGoey, R.G. Lambert, J. Jaremko
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, pp. S66-S67
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Introduction: Intra-articular steroid injection (IASI) is commonly used in the emergency department for management of osteoarthritis (OA) symptoms. Hip IASI carries risks, such as avascular necrosis, and there is currently no reliable way to predict long-term response of a patient’s OA to IASI. Ultrasound (US) conveniently assesses for active arthropathy by detecting effusion-synovitis, and x-ray (XR) is useful for visualizing bone-related changes. We investigated the extent that a response to hip IASI could be predicted from baseline OA patient clinical and physical features alongside US and XR imaging features. Methods: 97 consenting patients with symptomatic hip OA presenting for hip IASI were evaluated at baseline (XR and US) and again 8-weeks after IASI (US only). Self-reported pain (WOMAC), hip range of motion (ROM) were measured at baseline and follow up. On US images we quantified joint effusion and synovial thickening, i.e., “effusion-synovitis”, by the bone-capsule distance (BCD) at the apex of the femoral head from outer femoral cortex to outer synovium. On XR, we measured minimum joint space width (cm) and Kellgren-Lawrence (K-L) Grade for osteophytes and sclerotic changes. Results: In our 97 patients (43 female) aged 28-87 years (mean 59+/-13 years, K-L grades averaged 2.5+/-1.5, and US BCD averaged 5.9+/-2.0 mm. We performed multiple linear regression using age, sex, BMI, ROM of hip flexion, US BCD, radiographic joint space width and K-L grade against the dependent variable, change in WOMAC pain subscore (R=0.587, P=0.002). We compared the response predicted by this model to the actual change in WOMAC pain. At a threshold value of -20% for minimal clinically important difference, 35/97 patients were responders, and a 2x2 table gave 67% overall model predictive accuracy, 61% sensitivity, and 71% specificity. Likelihood ratio for a positive response (LR+) was 2.13. Conclusion: Combining radiographic information on structural damage, US information on active arthropathy, and demographics correctly predicted about two-thirds of the patients that would benefit from IASI after 8 weeks. A patient with hip OA that met our model criteria was more than twice as likely to respond to IASI. With further model refinement, effective, personalized evidence-based management of symptomatic hip OA is possible using XR and hip US, which could both be performed during an ER visit.
MP07: Office-based family physicians’ use of point of care ultrasound for early pregnancy complaints
- C. Varner, S.L. McLeod, S. Hu, E. Bearss, A. Singwi, S. Lee, B. Borgundvaag
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 May 2017, p. S67
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Introduction: In Canada, family physicians (FPs) provide the majority of early pregnancy care. To receive a same day US, most patients will be sent to the emergency department (ED). FPs are starting to use point of care ultrasound (POCUS) for a variety of indications. The FaMOUS course was modeled after the Canadian Emergency Ultrasound Society (CEUS) ED Echo (EDE) curriculum and adapted with permission for FPs. The objective of this study was to assess the indications for POCUS use in early pregnancy and determine the diagnostic accuracy of POCUS performed by FPs following FaMOUS certification to detect intrauterine pregnancy (IUP) and fetal cardiac activity (FCA). Methods: This was a prospective, observational study conducted in 3 FP clinics from November 2015 to June 2016. Pregnant women <20 weeks gestational age who underwent a focused, transabdominal POCUS by a FaMOUS-certified FP using a handheld GE VScan were enrolled. FPs documented the presence or absence of IUP and FCA. The reference standard was radiologist-interpreted US performed after the FP POCUS. FPs were surveyed to assess provider confidence using POCUS and perceived impact on clinical decision-making. Results: Of 253 eligible patients, 56 (22.1%) underwent POCUS. Of these, 50 (89.3%) had a radiologist-interpreted US following the office-based FP visit. POCUS was used for the following indications: 11 (19.6%) had vaginal bleeding, 5 (8.9%) had abdominal pain, 7 (12.5%) had both vaginal bleeding and abdominal pain, and the indication for 33 (58.9%) patients was unclear. All patients had a documented IUP, resulting in a sensitivity of 94.0% (95% CI: 83.5%, 98.5%) and 100% positive predictive value. FCA resulted in sensitivity of 82.9% (95% CI: 69.2, 92.4%) and specificity of 100% (95% CI: 29.2%, 100.0%). When surveyed, 100% of FPs were confident performing POCUS and reported POCUS had an overall positive impact on clinical practice. 75% agreed the use of POCUS decreased the need for urgent radiologist-interpreted US. Conclusion: Following a certification process modeled after the CEUS EDE curriculum, FPs used POCUS for both CEUS-defined indications and indications that were unclear. FPs trained in early pregnancy POCUS demonstrated excellent diagnostic accuracy identifying IUP and FCA. Future study should assess the clinical impact of office-based POCUS, including whether its use results in decreased ED visits for this patient population.