Kevin H Chu, Anne-Maree Kelly, W. Kuan, Frances B Kinnear, G. Keijzers, D. Horner, Said Laribi, Alejandro Cardozo, M. Karamercan, S. Klim, Tissa Wijeratne, Sinan Kamona, Colin A Graham, Richard Body, Tom Roberts
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The outcome of interest was serious secondary headache. The predictive performance of 10 red flag criteria from the SNNOOP10 criteria list was estimated individually and in combination.\n\n\nRESULTS\n5293 patients were included, of whom 6.1% (95% CI 5.5% to 6.8%) had a defined serious cause identified. New neurological deficit, history of neoplasm, older age (>50 years) and recent head trauma (2-7 days prior) were independent predictors of a serious secondary headache diagnosis. After adjusting for other predictors, sudden onset, onset during exertion, pregnancy and immune suppression were not associated with a serious headache diagnosis. The combined sensitivity of the red flag criteria overall was 96.5% (95% CI 93.2% to 98.3%) but specificity was low, 5.1% (95% CI 4.3% to 6.0%). Positive predictive value was 9.3% (95% CI 8.2% to 10.5%) with negative predictive value of 93.5% (95% CI 87.6% to 96.8%).\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nThe sensitivity and specificity of the red flag criteria in this study were lower than previously reported. Regarding clinical practice, this suggests that red flag criteria may be useful to identify patients at higher risk of a serious secondary headache cause, but their low specificity could result in increased rates of CT scanning.\n\n\nTRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER\nANZCTR376695.","PeriodicalId":410922,"journal":{"name":"Emergency medicine journal : EMJ","volume":"6 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Predictive performance of the common red flags in emergency department headache patients: a HEAD and HEAD-Colombia study.\",\"authors\":\"Kevin H Chu, Anne-Maree Kelly, W. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的在急诊室就诊的头痛患者中,只有一小部分患者的头痛病因比较严重。SNNOOP10标准包含了严重原因的红色和橙色标志,该标准已被提出,但尚未得到充分研究。本项目旨在比较在一个大型跨国急诊室头痛患者队列中,诊断为严重继发性头痛和未诊断为严重继发性头痛的患者中,符合 10 项公认红旗标准(单独或合并)的患者比例。研究结果为严重继发性头痛。结果共纳入 5,293 例患者,其中 6.1%(95% CI 5.5% 至 6.8%)的患者有明确的严重病因。新的神经功能缺损、肿瘤病史、年龄较大(大于 50 岁)和近期头部外伤(2-7 天前)是严重继发性头痛诊断的独立预测因素。对其他预测因素进行调整后,突然发病、劳累时发病、怀孕和免疫抑制与严重头痛诊断无关。红旗标准的综合灵敏度为96.5%(95% CI为93.2%至98.3%),但特异性较低,仅为5.1%(95% CI为4.3%至6.0%)。阳性预测值为 9.3%(95% CI 8.2% 至 10.5%),阴性预测值为 93.5%(95% CI 87.6% 至 96.8%)。就临床实践而言,这表明红旗标准可能有助于识别继发性严重头痛风险较高的患者,但其特异性较低可能会导致 CT 扫描率增加。
Predictive performance of the common red flags in emergency department headache patients: a HEAD and HEAD-Colombia study.
OBJECTIVES
Only a small proportion of patients presenting to an ED with headache have a serious cause. The SNNOOP10 criteria, which incorporates red and orange flags for serious causes, has been proposed but not well studied. This project aims to compare the proportion of patients with 10 commonly accepted red flag criteria (singly and in combination) between patients with and without a diagnosis of serious secondary headache in a large, multinational cohort of ED patients presenting with headache.
METHODS
Secondary analysis of data obtained in the HEAD and HEAD-Colombia studies. The outcome of interest was serious secondary headache. The predictive performance of 10 red flag criteria from the SNNOOP10 criteria list was estimated individually and in combination.
RESULTS
5293 patients were included, of whom 6.1% (95% CI 5.5% to 6.8%) had a defined serious cause identified. New neurological deficit, history of neoplasm, older age (>50 years) and recent head trauma (2-7 days prior) were independent predictors of a serious secondary headache diagnosis. After adjusting for other predictors, sudden onset, onset during exertion, pregnancy and immune suppression were not associated with a serious headache diagnosis. The combined sensitivity of the red flag criteria overall was 96.5% (95% CI 93.2% to 98.3%) but specificity was low, 5.1% (95% CI 4.3% to 6.0%). Positive predictive value was 9.3% (95% CI 8.2% to 10.5%) with negative predictive value of 93.5% (95% CI 87.6% to 96.8%).
CONCLUSION
The sensitivity and specificity of the red flag criteria in this study were lower than previously reported. Regarding clinical practice, this suggests that red flag criteria may be useful to identify patients at higher risk of a serious secondary headache cause, but their low specificity could result in increased rates of CT scanning.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER
ANZCTR376695.