PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 311-316
Predictive Model for Serious Bacterial Infections Among Infants Younger Than 3 Months of Age
Received Aug 28, 2000; accepted Dec 1, 2000.

From the Divisions of * Emergency Medicine and Objective. To develop a data-derived
model for predicting serious bacterial infection (SBI) among febrile
infants <3 months old.
Methods. All infants Results. Of 5279 febrile infants studied, SBI was
diagnosed in 373 patients (7%): 316 urinary tract infections (UTIs),
17 meningitis, and 59 bacteremia (8 with meningitis, 11 with UTIs). The
model sequentially used 4 clinical parameters to define high-risk
patients: positive UA, WBC count Conclusions. Decision-tree analysis using common clinical
variables can reasonably predict febrile infants at high-risk for SBI.
Sequential use of UA, WBC count, temperature, and age can identify
infants who are at high risk of SBI with a relative risk of 12.1 compared with lower-risk infants.
Infectious
Disease, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
90 days old with a temperature
38.0°C seen in an urban emergency department (ED) were
retrospectively identified. SBI was defined as a positive culture of
urine, blood, or cerebrospinal fluid. Tree-structured analysis via
recursive partitioning was used to develop the model. SBI or No-SBI was
the dichotomous outcome variable, and age, temperature, urinalysis
(UA), white blood cell (WBC) count, absolute neutrophil count, and
cerebrospinal fluid WBC were entered as potential predictors. The model
was tested by V-fold cross-validation.
20 000/mm3 or
4100/mm3, temperature
39.6°C, and age <13 days. The
sensitivity of the model for SBI is 82% (95% confidence interval
[CI]: 78%-86%) and the negative predictive value is 98.3% (95%
CI: 97.8%-98.7%). The negative predictive value for bacteremia or
meningitis is 99.6% (95% CI: 99.4%-99.8%). The relative risk
between high- and low-risk groups is 12.1 (95% CI: 9.3-15.6).
Sixty-six SBI patients (18%) were misclassified into the lower risk
group: 51 UTIs, 14 with bacteremia, and 1 with meningitis.
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