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. 2020 Jun 4;15(6):e0234055.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234055. eCollection 2020.

Defining the volume of consultations for musculoskeletal infection encountered by pediatric orthopaedic services in the United States

Ryan J Koehler  1 Benjamin J Shore  2 Daniel Hedequest  2 Benton E Heyworth  2 Colin May  2 Patricia E Miller  2 Emily S Rademacher  2 Ryan M Sanborn  2 Joshua S Murphy  3 Alyssa Roseman  4 Jason W Stoneback  4 Anastasiya A Trizno  4 Rachel Y Goldstein  5 Liam Harris  5 Ena Nielsen  5 Divya Talwar  6 Jaime R Denning  7 Noor Saaed  7 Brooke Kutz  8   9 Jennifer C Laine  8   9 Mary Naas  8   9 Walter H Truong  8   9 Matthew Rotando  10 David D Spence  10 Brian K Brighton  11 Christine Churchill  11 Joseph A Janicki  12 Kiana King  12 Jacob Wild  12 Allan C Beebe  13 Schon Crouse  13 Teaya Rough  13 Mallory Rowan  13 Satbir Singh  13 Amanda Davis-Juarez  14 Adam Gould  14 Olivia Hughes  14 Kathleen D Rickert  14 Vidyadhar V Upasani  14 Todd J Blumberg  15 Viviana Bompadre  15 Antoinette W Lindberg  15 Mark L Miller  16 Jaclyn F Hill  17 Hayley Peoples  17 Scott B Rosenfeld  17 Rod Turner  17 Lawson A Copley  18 Eduardo A Lindsay  18 Brandon A Ramo  18 Naureen Tareen  18 R. Lane Winberly  18 G. Ying Li  19 Jordyn Sessel  19 Megan E Johnson  1 Samuel Johnson  1 Stephanie N Moore-Lotridge  1 Julie Shelton  1 Keith D Baldwin  6 Jonathan G Schoenecker  1 Children’s Orthopaedic Trauma and Infection Consortium for Evidence Based Study (CORTICES) Group
Affiliations

Defining the volume of consultations for musculoskeletal infection encountered by pediatric orthopaedic services in the United States

Ryan J Koehler et al. PLoS One. .

Erratum in

Abstract

Objective: Adequate resources are required to rapidly diagnose and treat pediatric musculoskeletal infection (MSKI). The workload MSKI consults contribute to pediatric orthopaedic services is unknown as prior epidemiologic studies are variable and negative work-ups are not included in national discharge databases. The hypothesis was tested that MSKI consults constitute a substantial volume of total consultations for pediatric orthopaedic services across the United States.

Study design: Eighteen institutions from the Children's ORthopaedic Trauma and Infection Consortium for Evidence-based Study (CORTICES) group retrospectively reviewed a minimum of 1 year of hospital data, reporting the total number of surgeons, total consultations, and MSKI-related consultations. Consultations were classified by the location of consultation (emergency department or inpatient). Culture positivity rate and pathogens were also reported.

Results: 87,449 total orthopaedic consultations and 7,814 MSKI-related consultations performed by 229 pediatric orthopaedic surgeons were reviewed. There was an average of 13 orthopaedic surgeons per site each performing an average of 154 consultations per year. On average, 9% of consultations were MSKI related and 37% of these consults yielded positive cultures. Finally, a weak inverse monotonic relationship was noted between percent culture positivity and percent of total orthopedic consults for MSKI.

Conclusion: At large, academic pediatric tertiary care centers, pediatric orthopaedic services consult on an average of ~3,000 'rule-out' MSKI cases annually. These patients account for nearly 1 in 10 orthopaedic consultations, of which 1 in 3 are culture positive. Considering that 2 in 3 consultations were culture negative, estimating resources required for pediatric orthopaedic consult services to work up and treat children based on culture positive administrative discharge data underestimates clinical need. Finally, ascertainment bias must be considered when comparing differences in culture rates from different institution's pediatric orthopaedics services, given the variability in when orthopaedic physicians become involved in a MSKI workup.

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Conflict of interest statement

Funding for the creation of this database was provided by the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America (POSNA) through a directed research. Many members of the CORTICES are likewise active members of POSNA. The CORTICES Group has no other competing interests.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Causative pathogen proportions.
A) Culture-positive results from orthopaedic consultations for MSKI across all 18 CORTICES sites. B) Proportion of positive cultures by region: West (n = 4), Midwest (n = 6), South (n = 6), and Northeast (n = 2). This figure is similar but not identical to the original image and is therefore for illustrative purposes only.

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