TY - JOUR
T1 - Use of Clinical Findings in the Diagnosis of Urinary Tract Infection in Women
AU - Wigton, Robert S.
AU - Hoellerich, Vincent L.
AU - Ornato, Joseph P.
AU - Leu, Vicki
AU - Mazzotta, Lawrence A.
AU - Cheng, I. Hui C.
PY - 1985/12
Y1 - 1985/12
N2 - To develop a decision rule for predicting urinary culture results in patients suspected of having urinary tract infection, we used discriminant analysis to identify the optimum combination of clinical findings. Thirty variables identified in a pilot study were recorded from 248 patients in a second study. Five findings were independent predictors of positive urinary culture: history of urinary tract infection, back pain, microscopic pyuria, hematuria, and bacteriuria. An additive decision rule that assigned one point for each of the five variables was tested in a third group of 258 patients. These scores stratified patients into subsets with increasing likelihood of positive culture. Higher scores identified patients who can confidently be treated without documentation of bacteriuria. If the rule applies successfully to other populations, cost savings could result from identification of patients who do not require quantitative urinary culture to demonstrate significant bacteriuria.
AB - To develop a decision rule for predicting urinary culture results in patients suspected of having urinary tract infection, we used discriminant analysis to identify the optimum combination of clinical findings. Thirty variables identified in a pilot study were recorded from 248 patients in a second study. Five findings were independent predictors of positive urinary culture: history of urinary tract infection, back pain, microscopic pyuria, hematuria, and bacteriuria. An additive decision rule that assigned one point for each of the five variables was tested in a third group of 258 patients. These scores stratified patients into subsets with increasing likelihood of positive culture. Higher scores identified patients who can confidently be treated without documentation of bacteriuria. If the rule applies successfully to other populations, cost savings could result from identification of patients who do not require quantitative urinary culture to demonstrate significant bacteriuria.
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U2 - 10.1001/archinte.1985.00360120094016
DO - 10.1001/archinte.1985.00360120094016
M3 - Article
C2 - 2934038
AN - SCOPUS:84941812913
SN - 2168-6106
VL - 145
SP - 2222
EP - 2227
JO - Archives of internal medicine (Chicago, Ill. : 1908)
JF - Archives of internal medicine (Chicago, Ill. : 1908)
IS - 12
ER -