Cargando…

PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat

OBJECTIVE: To assess the association between features of acute sore throat and the growth of streptococci from culturing a throat swab. DESIGN: Diagnostic cohort. SETTING: UK general practices. PARTICIPANTS: Patients aged 5 or over presenting with an acute sore throat. Patients were recruited for a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Little, Paul, Moore, Michael, Hobbs, F D R, Mant, David, McNulty, Cliodna, Williamson, Ian, Cheng, Edith, Stuart, Beth, Kelly, Joanne, Barnett, Jane, Mullee, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24163209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003943
_version_ 1782288638352031744
author Little, Paul
Moore, Michael
Hobbs, F D R
Mant, David
McNulty, Cliodna
Williamson, Ian
Cheng, Edith
Stuart, Beth
Kelly, Joanne
Barnett, Jane
Mullee, Mark
author_facet Little, Paul
Moore, Michael
Hobbs, F D R
Mant, David
McNulty, Cliodna
Williamson, Ian
Cheng, Edith
Stuart, Beth
Kelly, Joanne
Barnett, Jane
Mullee, Mark
author_sort Little, Paul
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To assess the association between features of acute sore throat and the growth of streptococci from culturing a throat swab. DESIGN: Diagnostic cohort. SETTING: UK general practices. PARTICIPANTS: Patients aged 5 or over presenting with an acute sore throat. Patients were recruited for a second cohort (cohort 2, n=517) consecutively after the first (cohort 1, n=606) from similar practices. MAIN OUTCOME: Predictors of the presence of Lancefield A/C/G streptococci. RESULTS: The clinical score developed from cohort 1 had poor discrimination in cohort 2 (bootstrapped estimate of area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve (0.65), due to the poor validity of the individual items in the second data set. Variables significant in multivariate analysis in both cohorts were rapid attendance (prior duration 3 days or less; multivariate adjusted OR 1.92 cohort, 1.67 cohort 2); fever in the last 24 h (1.69, 2.40); and doctor assessment of severity (severely inflamed pharynx/tonsils (2.28, 2.29)). The absence of coryza or cough and purulent tonsils were significant in univariate analysis in both cohorts and in multivariate analysis in one cohort. A five-item score based on Fever, Purulence, Attend rapidly (3 days or less), severely Inflamed tonsils and No cough or coryza (FeverPAIN) had moderate predictive value (bootstrapped area under the ROC curve 0.73 cohort 1, 0.71 cohort 2) and identified a substantial number of participants at low risk of streptococcal infection (38% in cohort 1, 36% in cohort 2 scored ≤1, associated with a streptococcal percentage of 13% and 18%, respectively). A Centor score of ≤1 identified 23% and 26% of participants with streptococcal percentages of 10% and 28%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Items widely used to help identify streptococcal sore throat may not be the most consistent. A modified clinical scoring system (FeverPAIN) which requires further validation may be clinically helpful in identifying individuals who are unlikely to have major pathogenic streptococci.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3808825
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38088252013-10-29 PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat Little, Paul Moore, Michael Hobbs, F D R Mant, David McNulty, Cliodna Williamson, Ian Cheng, Edith Stuart, Beth Kelly, Joanne Barnett, Jane Mullee, Mark BMJ Open General practice / Family practice OBJECTIVE: To assess the association between features of acute sore throat and the growth of streptococci from culturing a throat swab. DESIGN: Diagnostic cohort. SETTING: UK general practices. PARTICIPANTS: Patients aged 5 or over presenting with an acute sore throat. Patients were recruited for a second cohort (cohort 2, n=517) consecutively after the first (cohort 1, n=606) from similar practices. MAIN OUTCOME: Predictors of the presence of Lancefield A/C/G streptococci. RESULTS: The clinical score developed from cohort 1 had poor discrimination in cohort 2 (bootstrapped estimate of area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve (0.65), due to the poor validity of the individual items in the second data set. Variables significant in multivariate analysis in both cohorts were rapid attendance (prior duration 3 days or less; multivariate adjusted OR 1.92 cohort, 1.67 cohort 2); fever in the last 24 h (1.69, 2.40); and doctor assessment of severity (severely inflamed pharynx/tonsils (2.28, 2.29)). The absence of coryza or cough and purulent tonsils were significant in univariate analysis in both cohorts and in multivariate analysis in one cohort. A five-item score based on Fever, Purulence, Attend rapidly (3 days or less), severely Inflamed tonsils and No cough or coryza (FeverPAIN) had moderate predictive value (bootstrapped area under the ROC curve 0.73 cohort 1, 0.71 cohort 2) and identified a substantial number of participants at low risk of streptococcal infection (38% in cohort 1, 36% in cohort 2 scored ≤1, associated with a streptococcal percentage of 13% and 18%, respectively). A Centor score of ≤1 identified 23% and 26% of participants with streptococcal percentages of 10% and 28%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Items widely used to help identify streptococcal sore throat may not be the most consistent. A modified clinical scoring system (FeverPAIN) which requires further validation may be clinically helpful in identifying individuals who are unlikely to have major pathogenic streptococci. BMJ Publishing Group 2013-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3808825/ /pubmed/24163209 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003943 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle General practice / Family practice
Little, Paul
Moore, Michael
Hobbs, F D R
Mant, David
McNulty, Cliodna
Williamson, Ian
Cheng, Edith
Stuart, Beth
Kelly, Joanne
Barnett, Jane
Mullee, Mark
PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title_full PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title_fullStr PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title_full_unstemmed PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title_short PRImary care Streptococcal Management (PRISM) study: identifying clinical variables associated with Lancefield group A β-haemolytic streptococci and Lancefield non-Group A streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
title_sort primary care streptococcal management (prism) study: identifying clinical variables associated with lancefield group a β-haemolytic streptococci and lancefield non-group a streptococcal throat infections from two cohorts of patients presenting with an acute sore throat
topic General practice / Family practice
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24163209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003943
work_keys_str_mv AT littlepaul primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT mooremichael primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT hobbsfdr primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT mantdavid primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT mcnultycliodna primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT williamsonian primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT chengedith primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT stuartbeth primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT kellyjoanne primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT barnettjane primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT mulleemark primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat
AT primarycarestreptococcalmanagementprismstudyidentifyingclinicalvariablesassociatedwithlancefieldgroupabhaemolyticstreptococciandlancefieldnongroupastreptococcalthroatinfectionsfromtwocohortsofpatientspresentingwithanacutesorethroat