1. Stratification of risk for emergent intracranial abnormalities in children with headaches: a Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) study protocol
- Author
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Andrea T Cruz, Rakesh D Mistry, Nathan Kuppermann, Sandra P Spencer, Claudia R Morris, Peter S Dayan, T Charles Casper, Alexander J Rogers, Kimberly S Quayle, Michael D Johnson, Daniel S Tsze, Bradley J Barney, Lawrence P Richer, Danica B Liberman, Pamela J Okada, Sage R Myers, Jane K Soung, Lynn Babcock, Eileen J Klein, Dale W Steele, Danny G Thomas, Jacqueline M Grupp-Phelan, and Tiffani J Johnson
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Headache is a common chief complaint of children presenting to emergency departments (EDs). Approximately 0.5%–1% will have emergent intracranial abnormalities (EIAs) such as brain tumours or strokes. However, more than one-third undergo emergent neuroimaging in the ED, resulting in a large number of children unnecessarily exposed to radiation. The overuse of neuroimaging in children with headaches in the ED is driven by clinician concern for life-threatening EIAs and lack of clarity regarding which clinical characteristics accurately identify children with EIAs. The study objective is to derive and internally validate a stratification model that accurately identifies the risk of EIA in children with headaches based on clinically sensible and reliable variables.Methods and analysis Prospective cohort study of 28 000 children with headaches presenting to any of 18 EDs in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). We include children aged 2–17 years with a chief complaint of headache. We exclude children with a clear non-intracranial alternative diagnosis, fever, neuroimaging within previous year, neurological or developmental condition such that patient history or physical examination may be unreliable, Glasgow Coma Scale score
- Published
- 2023
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