Predictability and stability testing to assess clinical decision instrument performance for children after blunt torso trauma

The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) has developed a clinical-decision instrument (CDI) to identify children at very low risk of intra-abdominal injury. However, the CDI has not been externally validated. We sought to vet the PECARN CDI with the Predictability Computability...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLOS digital health 2022-08, Vol.1 (8), p.e0000076-e0000076
Hauptverfasser: Kornblith, Aaron E, Singh, Chandan, Devlin, Gabriel, Addo, Newton, Streck, Christian J, Holmes, James F, Kuppermann, Nathan, Grupp-Phelan, Jacqueline, Fineman, Jeffrey, Butte, Atul J, Yu, Bin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) has developed a clinical-decision instrument (CDI) to identify children at very low risk of intra-abdominal injury. However, the CDI has not been externally validated. We sought to vet the PECARN CDI with the Predictability Computability Stability (PCS) data science framework, potentially increasing its chance of a successful external validation. We performed a secondary analysis of two prospectively collected datasets: PECARN (12,044 children from 20 emergency departments) and an independent external validation dataset from the Pediatric Surgical Research Collaborative (PedSRC; 2,188 children from 14 emergency departments). We used PCS to reanalyze the original PECARN CDI along with new interpretable PCS CDIs developed using the PECARN dataset. External validation was then measured on the PedSRC dataset. Three predictor variables (abdominal wall trauma, Glasgow Coma Scale Score
ISSN:2767-3170
2767-3170
DOI:10.1371/journal.pdig.0000076