Diagnosis of acute cystitis in primary care: symptom-based versus urinalysis-based diagnosis.
Rian Lelie- van der ZandeEllen S KosterMarion GrolKurt G NaberJakhongir F AlidjanovMartina TeichertM Marcel BouvyPublished in: Primary health care research & development (2022)
In the patient group, 59 women were included, 38 of whom a GP positively diagnosed for AC. The reference group included 70 women. The PPV of the ACSS questionnaire was 77.3%, and the NPV was 73.3%. Analysis of patient data for divergent results showed that differential symptoms, QoL and relevant conditions explained false-positive and false-negative results. Revised results (most probable diagnosis) based on this analysis showed a PPV and NPV of 88.6% and 73.3% for the ACSS questionnaire and 100% and 76.2% for the urine test(s). For use in primary care, a reduction in false-positive and false-negative results can be achieved by including scores for differential symptoms, QoL and relevant conditions, alongside a total typical symptoms score of 6 or higher.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- case report
- sleep quality
- cross sectional
- electronic health record
- general practice
- type diabetes
- psychometric properties
- pregnant women
- respiratory failure
- cervical cancer screening
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- artificial intelligence
- mechanical ventilation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome