AI Article Synopsis

  • Foreign body aspiration (FBA) is a common emergency in children that can be misdiagnosed, delaying treatment; this study aimed to explore the reasons behind such misdiagnoses.
  • The research involved a review of 226 children's medical charts, with 35.4% of cases initially misdiagnosed, often as bronchiolitis, due to errors in testing and critical information gathering.
  • Significant factors linked to misdiagnosis included long presentation time, referrals from primary institutions, and certain clinical characteristics such as atypical symptoms or foreign bodies not seen on CT scans.

Article Abstract

Foreign body aspiration (FBA) in children is a common emergency that can easily be missed, leading to delays in treatment. Few large cohort studies have focused on errors in diagnostic assessment. The main purpose of this study was to analyze factors contributing to the initial misdiagnosis of FBA in children. We retrospectively reviewed the charts of 226 children diagnosed with FBA at the Second Affiliated Hospital and Yuying Children's Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University from January 2018 to November 2020. Cases were divided into two groups according to whether or not patients were initially misdiagnosed. The clinical characteristics of the two groups were then compared. The Diagnosis Error Evaluation and Research (DEER) taxonomy tool was applied to cases with initial misdiagnosis. Of the 226 included children with a final diagnosis of FBA, 153 (67.7%) were boys. Ninety percent of patients were under 3 years old. More than half (61.9%) of the children were referred from primary institutions, and 38.1% visited tertiary hospitals directly. A total of 80 (35.4%) patients were initially misdiagnosed. More than half of misdiagnosed children received an alternative diagnosis of bronchiolitis (51.3%), the most common alternative diagnosis. Test failures (i.e., errors in test ordering, test performance, and clinician processing) were primarily responsible for the majority of initial diagnostic errors (76.3%), followed by failure or delay in eliciting critical case history information (20.0%). Characteristics significantly associated with initial misdiagnosis were: presentation over 24 h (OR 9.2, 95% CI 4.8-17.5), being referred from primary institutions (OR 8.8, 4.1-19.0), no witnessed aspiration crisis (OR 7.8, 3.0-20.3), (4) atypical signs or symptoms (OR 3.2, 1.8-5.7), foreign body not visible on CT (OR 36.2, 2.1-636.8), foreign body located in secondary bronchi (OR 4.8, 1.3-17.2), organic foreign body (OR 6.2, 1.4-27.2), and history of recurrent respiratory infections (OR 2.7, 1.4-5.3). Children with misdiagnosis tended to have a longer time from symptom onset to the definitive diagnosis of FBA ( < 0.001). More than one-third of children with FBA were missed at first presentation. Errors in diagnostic testing and history taking were the main reasons leading to initial misdiagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8555661PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.694211DOI Listing

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