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Performance Comparison of Infection Prediction Scores in a South African Neonatal Unit:A Retrospective Case-Control Study

Authors :
Lizel Georgi, Lloyd
Angela, Dramowski
Adrie, Bekker
Nada, Malou
Cecilia, Ferreyra
Mirjam Maria, Van Weissenbruch
Pediatric surgery
Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Source :
Lloyd, L G, Dramowski, A, Bekker, A, Malou, N, Ferreyra, C & van Weissenbruch, M M 2022, ' Performance Comparison of Infection Prediction Scores in a South African Neonatal Unit : A Retrospective Case-Control Study ', Frontiers in Pediatrics, vol. 10, 830510 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.830510, Frontiers in Pediatrics, 10:830510. Frontiers Media S.A.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background and objectivesInfection prediction scores are useful ancillary tests in determining the likelihood of neonatal hospital-acquired infection (HAI), particularly in very low birth weight (VLBW; MethodsWe identified existing infection prediction scores through literature searches and assessed each score for suitability and feasibility of use in resource-limited settings. Performance of suitable scores were compared using a retrospective dataset of VLBW infants (2016–2017) from a tertiary hospital neonatal unit in Cape Town, South Africa. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and likelihood ratios were calculated for each score.ResultsEleven infection prediction scores were identified, but only five were suitable for use in resource-limited settings (NOSEP1, Singh, Rosenberg, and Bekhof scores). The five selected scores were evaluated using data from 841 episodes of HAI in 659 VLBW infants. The sensitivity for the scores ranged between 3% (NOSEP1 ≥14; proven and presumed infection), to a maximum of 74% (Singh score ≥1; proven infection). The specificity of these scores ranged from 31% (Singh score ≥1; proven and presumed infection) to 100% (NOSEP1 ≥11 and ≥14, NOSEP-NEW-1 ≥11; proven and presumed infection).ConclusionExisting infection prediction scores did not achieve comparable predictive performance in South African VLBW infants and should therefore only be used as an adjunct to clinical judgment in antimicrobial decision making. Future studies should develop infection prediction scores that have high diagnostic accuracy and are feasible to implement in resource-limited neonatal units.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22962360
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lloyd, L G, Dramowski, A, Bekker, A, Malou, N, Ferreyra, C & van Weissenbruch, M M 2022, ' Performance Comparison of Infection Prediction Scores in a South African Neonatal Unit : A Retrospective Case-Control Study ', Frontiers in Pediatrics, vol. 10, 830510 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.830510, Frontiers in Pediatrics, 10:830510. Frontiers Media S.A.
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....308b3bdc08793bee1c077dee494bb223