2016
DOI: 10.3310/hta20510
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The Diagnosis of Urinary Tract infection in Young children (DUTY): a diagnostic prospective observational study to derive and validate a clinical algorithm for the diagnosis of urinary tract infection in children presenting to primary care with an acute illness

Abstract: BackgroundIt is not clear which young children presenting acutely unwell to primary care should be investigated for urinary tract infection (UTI) and whether or not dipstick testing should be used to inform antibiotic treatment.ObjectivesTo develop algorithms to accurately identify pre-school children in whom urine should be obtained; assess whether or not dipstick urinalysis provides additional diagnostic information; and model algorithm cost-effectiveness.DesignMulticentre, prospective diagnostic cohort stud… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(96 citation statements)
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References 155 publications
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“…Clinicians were asked to record reasons for not inviting potentially eligible children to participate in the study and to report a global illness severity (successfully used in a previous study 16 and scored from zero to ten) for those invited but declining participation. After receiving informed consent from the children's parents (and assent from children aged ≥11 years), clinicians completed a structured online (or paper) case report form (appendix).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinicians were asked to record reasons for not inviting potentially eligible children to participate in the study and to report a global illness severity (successfully used in a previous study 16 and scored from zero to ten) for those invited but declining participation. After receiving informed consent from the children's parents (and assent from children aged ≥11 years), clinicians completed a structured online (or paper) case report form (appendix).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Implications for research and practice Improved recognition of UTI in children will lead to improved treatment and outcomes. 11 Heightened suspicion of UTI in acutely unwell children presenting to primary care is therefore indicated. Recognition may be improved in the future through the use of a validated clinical algorithm quantifying the diagnostic relationship between symptoms, signs, dipstick testing, and laboratoryconfirmed UTI.…”
Section: Comparison With Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study also found that certain subgroups are at greater risk of hospitalisation. It may be that those at risk of RTI-related hospitalisation could be defined in greater detail, thus enabling the development of a symptom-based scoring algorithm modelled on algorithms that already exist for many other conditions [11,25,26]. However, symptoms are not well recorded in routine records.…”
Section: Implications For Clinical Practice and Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%