• J Hosp Med · Nov 2022

    Derivation of a clinical-based model to detect invasive bacterial infections in febrile infants.

    • Jeffrey P Yaeger, Jeremiah Jones, Ashkan Ertefaie, Mary T Caserta, and Kevin A Fiscella.
    • Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York, USA.
    • J Hosp Med. 2022 Nov 1; 17 (11): 893900893-900.

    BackgroundFebrile infants are at risk for invasive bacterial infections (IBIs) (i.e., bacteremia and bacterial meningitis), which, when undiagnosed, may have devastating consequences. Current IBI predictive models rely on serum biomarkers, which may not provide timely results and may be difficult to obtain in low-resource settings.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to derive a clinical-based IBI predictive model for febrile infants.Designs, Setting, And ParticipantsThis is a cross-sectional study of infants brought to two pediatric emergency departments from January 2011 to December 2018. Inclusion criteria were age 0-90 days, temperature ≥38°C, and documented gestational age, fever duration, and illness duration.Main Outcome And MeasuresTo detect IBIs, we used regression and ensemble machine learning models and evidence-based predictors (i.e., sex, age, chronic medical condition, gestational age, appearance, maximum temperature, fever duration, illness duration, cough status, and urinary tract inflammation). We up-weighted infants with IBIs 8-fold and used 10-fold cross-validation to avoid overfitting. We calculated the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), prioritizing a high sensitivity to identify the optimal cut-point to estimate sensitivity and specificity.ResultsOf 2311 febrile infants, 39 had an IBI (1.7%); the median age was 54 days (interquartile range: 35-71). The AUC was 0.819 (95% confidence interval: 0.762, 0.868). The predictive model achieved a sensitivity of 0.974 (0.800, 1.00) and a specificity of 0.530 (0.484, 0.575). Findings suggest that a clinical-based model can detect IBIs in febrile infants, performing similarly to serum biomarker-based models. This model may improve health equity by enabling clinicians to estimate IBI risk in any setting. Future studies should prospectively validate findings across multiple sites and investigate performance by age.© 2022 Society of Hospital Medicine.

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