Back to Search Start Over

Defining the volume of consultations for musculoskeletal infection encountered by pediatric orthopaedic services in the United States

Authors :
Ena Nielsen
Ryan Sanborn
Mary Naas
Rachel Y. Goldstein
Divya Talwar
Jacob Wild
Olivia Hughes
Brandon A. Ramo
Jonathan G. Schoenecker
Daniel Hedequest
Scott Rosenfeld
Emily S Rademacher
Amanda Davis-Juarez
Noor Saaed
David D. Spence
Hayley Peoples
Mark L Miller
Kiana King
Jaclyn F. Hill
Vidyadhar V. Upasani
Julie Shelton
Anastasiya A Trizno
Samuel R Johnson
Jaime Rice Denning
Rod Turner
Alyssa Roseman
Stephanie N. Moore-Lotridge
Matthew Rotando
Todd J Blumberg
Jordyn Sessel
Allan Beebe
Kathleen D Rickert
Liam Harris
G. Ying Li
Patricia E. Miller
Children’s Orthopaedic Trauma
Ryan J Koehler
Joshua S. Murphy
Satbir Singh
Eduardo A Lindsay
R. Lane Winberly
Megan Johnson
Walter H. Truong
Jason W Stoneback
Lawson A B Copley
Adam Gould
Schon Crouse
Mallory Rowan
Brian K Brighton
Naureen Tareen
Colin May
Keith D. Baldwin
Brooke Kutz
Benjamin J. Shore
Antoinette W. Lindberg
Teaya Rough
Viviana Bompadre
Joseph A. Janicki
Benton E. Heyworth
Christine Churchill
Jennifer C. Laine
Tse, Herman
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 6, p e0234055 (2020), PloS one, vol 15, iss 6
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Public Library of Science, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Adequate resources are required to rapidly diagnose and treat pediatric musculoskeletal infection (MSKI). The workload MSKI consults contribute to pediatric orthopaedic services is unknown as prior epidemiologic studies are variable and negative work-ups are not included in national discharge databases. The hypothesis was tested that MSKI consults constitute a substantial volume of total consultations for pediatric orthopaedic services across the United States. Study design Eighteen institutions from the Children's ORthopaedic Trauma and Infection Consortium for Evidence-based Study (CORTICES) group retrospectively reviewed a minimum of 1 year of hospital data, reporting the total number of surgeons, total consultations, and MSKI-related consultations. Consultations were classified by the location of consultation (emergency department or inpatient). Culture positivity rate and pathogens were also reported. Results 87,449 total orthopaedic consultations and 7,814 MSKI-related consultations performed by 229 pediatric orthopaedic surgeons were reviewed. There was an average of 13 orthopaedic surgeons per site each performing an average of 154 consultations per year. On average, 9% of consultations were MSKI related and 37% of these consults yielded positive cultures. Finally, a weak inverse monotonic relationship was noted between percent culture positivity and percent of total orthopedic consults for MSKI. Conclusion At large, academic pediatric tertiary care centers, pediatric orthopaedic services consult on an average of ~3,000 'rule-out' MSKI cases annually. These patients account for nearly 1 in 10 orthopaedic consultations, of which 1 in 3 are culture positive. Considering that 2 in 3 consultations were culture negative, estimating resources required for pediatric orthopaedic consult services to work up and treat children based on culture positive administrative discharge data underestimates clinical need. Finally, ascertainment bias must be considered when comparing differences in culture rates from different institution's pediatric orthopaedics services, given the variability in when orthopaedic physicians become involved in a MSKI workup.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
15
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe2da59000453923b666a3a30cb8a015