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The Diagnosis of Urinary Tract Infection in Young Children (DUTY) Study Clinical Rule: Economic Evaluation
Authors:William Hollingworth  John Busby  Christopher C Butler  Kathryn O’Brien  Jonathan AC Sterne  Kerenza Hood  Paul Little  Michael Lawton  Kate Birnie  Emma Thomas-Jones  Kim Harman  Alastair D Hay
Institution:1. School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK;2. Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK;3. Division of Population Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK;4. South East Wales Trials Unit (SEWTU Centre for Trials Research), Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK;5. Primary Care and Population Sciences Division, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK;6. Centre for Academic Primary Care, NIHR School of Primary Care Research, School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
Abstract:

Objective

To estimate the cost-effectiveness of a two-step clinical rule using symptoms, signs and dipstick testing to guide the diagnosis and antibiotic treatment of urinary tract infection (UTI) in acutely unwell young children presenting to primary care.

Methods

Decision analytic model synthesising data from a multicentre, prospective cohort study (DUTY) and the wider literature to estimate the short-term and lifetime costs and healthcare outcomes (symptomatic days, recurrent UTI, quality adjusted life years) of eight diagnostic strategies. We compared GP clinical judgement with three strategies based on a ‘coefficient score’ combining seven symptoms and signs independently associated with UTI and four strategies based on weighted scores according to the presence/absence of five symptoms and signs. We compared dipstick testing versus laboratory culture in children at intermediate risk of UTI.

Results

Sampling, culture and antibiotic costs were lowest in high-specificity DUTY strategies (£1.22 and £1.08) compared to clinical judgement (£1.99). These strategies also approximately halved urine sampling (4.8% versus 9.1% in clinical judgement) without reducing sensitivity (58.2% versus 56.4%). Outcomes were very similar across all diagnostic strategies. High-specificity DUTY strategies were more cost-effective than clinical judgement in the short- (iNMB = £0.78 and £0.84) and long-term (iNMB =£2.31 and £2.50). Dipstick tests had poorer cost-effectiveness than laboratory culture in children at intermediate risk of UTI (iNMB = £-1.41).

Conclusions

Compared to GPs’ clinical judgement, high specificity clinical rules from the DUTY study could substantially reduce urine sampling, achieving lower costs and equivalent patient outcomes. Dipstick testing children for UTI is not cost-effective.
Keywords:antibacterial agents  diagnosis  economics  medical  pediatrics  urinary tract infections
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