Erschienen in:
01.07.2012 | Original Article
Outpatient Diverticulitis: Mild or Myth?
verfasst von:
Erin S. O’Connor, Maureen A. Smith, Charles P. Heise
Erschienen in:
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
|
Ausgabe 7/2012
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Abstract
Background
Diverticulitis is considered common in the outpatient population, with mild variants of described diagnostic criteria: left lower quadrant pain, fever, and leukocytosis. Here, expected criteria utilization among outpatients with a possible diagnosis of diverticulitis is assessed.
Study Design
Primary care acute clinic visits in 2008 for diverticulitis (ICD-9 562.11/562.13) or left lower quadrant pain (789.04) were identified among patients ≥40 years old. Encounters were reviewed through structured manual chart abstraction and evaluated for diagnostic accuracy compared to expected criteria. Analysis included inter-rater reliability (kappa tests) and descriptive frequencies by diagnosis code and diverticulitis rating (χ
2 tests).
Results
A total of 376 acute visits were identified with codes for diverticulitis (n = 97) or left lower quadrant pain (n = 279). High inter-rater reliability was demonstrated for key clinical variables (kappa = 0.84–1.0). Left lower quadrant pain was reported in >75% of patients, while temperature and white blood cell count data were frequently unavailable. Lack of these expected criteria resulted in low diagnostic accuracy ratings (“No/unlikely”—53.6% diverticulitis, 88.2% left lower quadrant pain, p < 0.001).
Conclusions
This investigation raises concern for low accuracy in the outpatient diagnosis of diverticulitis due to inconsistent use of expected criteria, suggesting a smaller population with true diverticulitis than previously anticipated, or lack of criteria applicability in this setting.