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Clinical diagnosis of acute bacterial rhinosinusitis, typical of experts
Authors:Johann Steurer MD   Ulrike Held PhD   Lucas M. Bachmann MD PhD   David Holzmann MD   Peter Ott MD    Olli S. Miettinen  MD MPH MSc PhD
Affiliation:Professor,;Senior Researcher,;Deputy Director, Horten Centre for patient oriented research and knowledge transfer, University of Zurich, Postfach Nord, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland;
Head of the Division of Rhinology and Anterior Skullbase Surgery,;Senior Physician, Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, University Hospital Zurich, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland;
Professor, Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, and Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Abstract:Background  Clinical diagnosis of acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS) is a concern when a patient presents with nasal discharge of recent onset together with facial pain or pressure. Given this presentation, the doctor would benefit from having access to software that specifies, first, what diagnostic indicators experts typically use in that diagnosis and then, upon entry of those facts, what experts' typical probability of ABS is in such a case.
Methods  We specified a set of 23 hypothetical presentations of this type by patients 20–75 years of age, involving a comprehensive set of clinical-diagnostic indicators. Members of an international expert panel independently set the probability of ABS in each of these cases. A logistic function of the diagnostic indicators was fitted to the medians of the probabilities.
Results  The fitting led to an expression of the experts' median probability of ABS as a joint function of the duration of the patient's facial pain/pressure, and indicators of the location(s) of this; indicators of exacerbation of the pain/pressure on bending forward, nasal obstruction, maxillary and/or frontal tenderness, pus from middle meatus, purulent postnasal drip, and fever; and indicators of recent upper respiratory tract infection, nasal polyposis and status post sinus surgery. This probability function is accessible at http://www.evimed.ch/ABS .
Interpretation  That probability function, made readily accessible, provides for expertly probability setting in clinical diagnosis of ABS, relevant for decisions about further diagnostics or treatment without further tests.
Keywords:acute bacterial sinusitis    diagnosis    experts    probability function
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