Risk-stratification tools for emergency department patients with syncope: A systematic review and meta-analysis of direct evidence for SAEM GRACE.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 EMERGENCY MEDICINE Academic Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-04 DOI:10.1111/acem.15041
Abel Wakai, Richard Sinert, Shahriar Zehtabchi, Ian S de Souza, Roshanak Benabbas, Robert Allen, Eric Dunne, Rebekah Richards, Amelie Ardilouze, Isidora Rovic
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Abstract

Objectives: Approximately 10% of patients with syncope have serious or life-threatening causes that may not be apparent during the initial emergency department (ED) assessment. Consequently, researchers have developed clinical decision rules (CDRs) to predict adverse outcomes and risk stratify ED syncope patients. This systematic review and meta-analysis (SRMA) aims to cohere and synthesize the best current evidence regarding the methodological quality and predictive accuracy of CDRs for developing an evidence-based ED syncope management guideline.

Methods: We conducted a systematic literature search according to the patient-intervention-control-outcome question: In patients 16 years of age or older who present to the ED with syncope for whom no underlying serious/life-threatening condition was found during the index ED visit (population), are risk stratification tools (intervention), better than unstructured clinical judgment (i.e., usual care; comparison), for providing accurate prognosis and aiding disposition decision for outcomes within 30 days (outcome)? Two reviewers independently assessed articles for inclusion and methodological quality. We performed statistical analysis using Meta-DiSc. We used GRADEPro GDT software to determine the certainty of the evidence and create a summary of the findings (SoF) tables.

Results: Of 2047 publications obtained through the search strategy, 31 comprising 13 CDRs met the inclusion criteria. There were 13 derivation studies (17,578 participants) and 24 validation studies (14,845 participants). Only three CDRs were validated in more than two studies. The San Francisco Syncope Rule (SFSR) was validated in 12 studies: positive likelihood ratio (LR+) 1.15-4.70 and negative likelihood ratio (LR-) 0.03-0.64. The Canadian Syncope Risk Score (CSRS) was validated in five studies: LR+ 1.15-2.58 and LR- 0.05-0.50. The Osservatorio Epidemiologico sulla Sincope nel Lazio (OESIL) risk score was validated in five studies: LR+ 1.16-3.32 and LR- 0.14-0.46.

Conclusions: Most CDRs for ED adult syncope management have low-quality evidence for routine clinical practice use. Only three CDRs (SFSR, CSRS, OESIL) are validated by more than two studies, with significant overlap in operating characteristics.

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急诊科晕厥患者的风险分级工具:对 SAEM GRACE 直接证据的系统回顾和荟萃分析。
目的:约有 10% 的晕厥患者有严重或危及生命的病因,而这些病因在急诊科 (ED) 初步评估时可能并不明显。因此,研究人员开发了临床决策规则(CDR)来预测不良后果并对急诊科晕厥患者进行风险分层。本系统综述和荟萃分析(SRMA)旨在整合和归纳目前有关 CDR 方法质量和预测准确性的最佳证据,以制定循证的急诊科晕厥管理指南:我们根据患者-干预-控制-结果这一问题进行了系统的文献检索:对于 16 岁或以上因晕厥到急诊科就诊且在急诊科就诊期间未发现潜在严重/危及生命情况的患者(人群),风险分层工具(干预)是否比非结构化临床判断(即常规护理;比较)更能提供准确的预后并帮助做出 30 天内的处置决定(结果)?两名审稿人独立评估文章的纳入情况和方法学质量。我们使用 Meta-DiSc 进行了统计分析。我们使用 GRADEPro GDT 软件确定证据的确定性,并创建了研究结果摘要(SoF)表:在通过搜索策略获得的 2047 篇出版物中,有 31 篇(包括 13 篇 CDR)符合纳入标准。其中有 13 项衍生研究(17578 名参与者)和 24 项验证研究(14845 名参与者)。只有三项 CDR 在两项以上的研究中得到验证。旧金山晕厥规则(SFSR)在 12 项研究中得到验证:阳性似然比 (LR+) 为 1.15-4.70,阴性似然比 (LR-) 为 0.03-0.64。加拿大晕厥风险评分(CSRS)在 5 项研究中得到验证:LR+ 为 1.15-2.58,LR- 为 0.05-0.50。拉齐奥晕厥流行病学观察站(OESIL)风险评分在五项研究中得到验证:LR+为1.16-3.32,LR-为0.14-0.46:大多数用于急诊室成人晕厥管理的 CDR 在常规临床实践中的应用证据质量较低。只有三项 CDR(SFSR、CSRS、OESIL)得到了两项以上研究的验证,其操作特征有明显重叠。
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来源期刊
Academic Emergency Medicine
Academic Emergency Medicine 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
6.80%
发文量
207
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Academic Emergency Medicine (AEM) is the official monthly publication of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) and publishes information relevant to the practice, educational advancements, and investigation of emergency medicine. It is the second-largest peer-reviewed scientific journal in the specialty of emergency medicine. The goal of AEM is to advance the science, education, and clinical practice of emergency medicine, to serve as a voice for the academic emergency medicine community, and to promote SAEM''s goals and objectives. Members and non-members worldwide depend on this journal for translational medicine relevant to emergency medicine, as well as for clinical news, case studies and more. Each issue contains information relevant to the research, educational advancements, and practice in emergency medicine. Subject matter is diverse, including preclinical studies, clinical topics, health policy, and educational methods. The research of SAEM members contributes significantly to the scientific content and development of the journal.
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