- Rogers, Alexander J;
- Kuppermann, Nathan;
- Anders, Jennifer;
- Roosevelt, Genie;
- Hoyle, John D;
- Ruddy, Richard M;
- Bennett, Jonathon E;
- Borgialli, Dominic A;
- Dayan, Peter S;
- Powell, Elizabeth C;
- Casper, T Charles;
- Ramilo, Octavio;
- Mahajan, Prashant;
- Network, the Febrile Infant Working Group of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research
Background
Febrile infants commonly present to emergency departments for evaluation.Objective
We describe the variation in diagnostic testing and hospitalization of febrile infants ≤60 days of age presenting to the emergency departments in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network.Methods
We enrolled a convenience sample of non-critically ill-appearing febrile infants (temperatures ≥38.0°C/100.4°F) ≤60 days of age who were being evaluated with blood cultures in 26 Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network emergency departments between 2008 and 2013. Patients were divided into younger (0-28 days of age) and older (29-60 days of age) cohorts for analysis. We evaluated diagnostic testing and hospitalization rates by infant age group using chi-square tests and by site using analysis of variance.Results
Four thousand seven hundred seventy-eight patients were eligible for analysis, of whom 1517 (32%) were 0-28 days of age. Rates of lumbar puncture and hospitalization were high (>90%) among infants ≤28 days of age, with chest radiography (35.5%) and viral testing (66.2%) less commonly obtained. Among infants 29-60 days of age, lumbar puncture (69.5%) and hospitalization (64.4%) rates were lower and declined with increasing age, with chest radiography (36.5%) use unchanged and viral testing (52.7%) slightly decreased. There was substantial variation between sites in the older cohort of infants, with lumbar puncture and hospitalization rates ranging from 40% to 90%.Conclusions
The evaluation and disposition of febrile infants ≤60 days of age is highly variable, particularly among infants who are 29-60 days of age. This variation demonstrates an opportunity to modify diagnostic and management strategies based on current epidemiology to safely decrease invasive testing and hospitalization.