The Myth of “Sinus Headache”

Here’s a simple truth to take away: incidentally-noted “chronic sinusitis” on CT should not be used as a scapegoat for acute atraumatic headache symptoms in the ED.

This is a retrospective review of non-contrast head CT at a single center in Boston, comparing 234 patients undergoing CT for atraumatic headache and 266 undergoing CT for minor head injury.  22.2% of atraumatic headache patients received radiologic diagnoses of “chronic sinusitis”, while 17.7% of minor head injury patients had a similar radiologic finding.  The authors conclude, within the limitations of this retrospective review, that findings of “chronic sinusitis” are purely incidental, and unlikely to be related to an Emergency Department visit for acute atraumatic headache, and should not be diagnosed with “sinus headache”.

This fits in with multiple other investigations demonstrating most “sinus headaches” outside the context of acute upper respiratory infection meet criteria for migrane, and respond to serotonin-receptor agonists.  Do not treat these patients with antibiotics, and do not correlate these incidental radiologic findings with acute pathology.

“Findings of chronic sinusitis on brain computed tomography are not associated with acute headaches.”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24750900

The Unusable Manchester Chest Pain Instrument

With probably underpowered derivation and validation, a model that seems to overfit the data, and incorporating an impractical and questionable cardiac biomarker – despite a lovely continuous predictive function – this instrument is doomed in its current form.

This is the Manchester Acute Coronary Syndromes (MACS), a prospectively derived and validated risk-stratification instrument.  These authors identify an 8 variable decision instrument based on 698 patients at Manchester Infirmary – including hsTnT, heart-type fatty-acid binding protein, ECG changes, diaphoresis, vomiting, radiation to right shoulder, worsening angina, and hypotension – and then validate it on 463 patients from Stepping Hill Hospital.  In the validation, 27.0% of patients were ultimately classified as “very low risk” with 98% sensitivity (95% CI 93.0% to 99.8%) for 30-day MACE, and the authors feel this tool could reduce unnecessary admissions.

My favorite feature from this study is the derivation of a continuous function for prediction of 30-day outcomes.  The authors state an AUC of 0.92 for the function predicting MACE, which suggests potential as a useful tool for discussing individualized risks with patients.  Rather than simply dichotomize a “very low risk” cohort, the predictive function could help aid shared decision-making conversations with patients.

However, the utilization of fatty-acid binding protein is questionable.  These same authors presented work favoring H-FABP with an AUC for diagnosis of AMI of 0.86, but compared it against a troponin assay with an AUC of 0.70.  A response to that same article notes the authors probably made inappropriate comparisons, and modern conventional troponin assays and/or high-sensitivity troponin assays have AUCs >0.90.  It’s not clear what, or how much, additional value this biomarker adds to this study – and its inclusion essentially obviates the generalizability of the tool.  No rapid, automated H-FABP assay is available suitable for use in an ED context.  It is also unfortunate the corresponding author declares conflict-of-interest with the manufacturers of the assays used.

Interestingly, as well, the authors focus only on the “very low risk” group when an odd thing happens in their validation population – the “low risk” group actually had fewer MACE than the “very low risk” group (1.2% vs. 1.6%).  This is a substantial reversal of the derivation population (5.8% vs. 0.4%), suggesting the attempted validation reveals their model may be overfitting the data.  The authors state the second site validation is a strength regarding combating overfitting, but do not mention this inconsistency in the outcomes.

And, finally, I’m not entirely certain what question this study was designed to answer.  The focus on a “very low risk” cohort in the discussion doesn’t entirely match the study design – it seems other studies focused on outcomes in low risk chest pain have specifically excluded patients whose presentation is clearly AMI on initial presentation.  The inclusion of the entire spectrum of disease, while valuable for their general model, dilutes the strength of their “very low risk” conclusions, as evidenced by wide confidence intervals around the sensitivity for MACE.

As the authors note in their discussion, additional work needs to be done to compare their model with other risk-stratification tools.  And, for anyone to use this tool other than the authors, the H-FABP needs to be dropped.  At the least, however, it fits in nicely with another recent critique – that many “low risk” and “very low risk” patients do not require observation and immediate provocative testing, where the false-positives and resource expenditures are simply preposterous.

“The Manchester Acute Coronary Syndromes (MACS) decision rule for suspected cardiac chest pain: derivation and external validation”
http://heart.bmj.com/content/early/2014/04/29/heartjnl-2014-305564

The Pain of Patient Satisfaction

From a business standpoint, it seems entirely reasonable to value patient satisfaction.  However, from a medical standpoint, high-quality ethical care, with clear, honest communication ought to be the goal – with patient satisfaction a natural outgrowth of good clinical practice.  Focusing independently on satisfaction due to financial incentives or otherwise distorts this natural balance.

One issue Emergency Physicians have struggled with is the supposed marriage between opiate analgesia and patient satisfaction.  This study is a retrospective review of 4,749 Press Ganey patient satisfaction survey scores linked to ED visit information from two hospitals in Rhode Island.  Scores were compared between those who received no analgesia, those receiving analgesia, and those receiving opiate analgesia in the ED.  Many sub-analyses were undertaken, attempting to control for baseline differences between those receiving opiates and those who did not.  Essentially, across the entire survey, no consistent effects were observed between satisfaction, analgesia, and opiate analgesia.

There are two main issues with this data.  First, the Press Ganey instrument is, essentially, useless for measuring satisfaction.  The questions asked are certainly reasonable surrogates for patient satisfaction, but their proprietary tool has never been validated or compared against any other measurement device, and its discriminatory power and reliability have never been described.  Second, this study probably addresses an entirely incorrect question by focusing on pain control in the ED, rather than prescriptions at discharge.  I think Emergency Physicians are less concerned with using opiates to manage acute pain in the ED than they are with prescribing at discharge – and sending folks home without opiate prescriptions seems to be, at least anecdotally, the more challenging issue.

I wouldn’t let anyone quote this study to you as evidence opiate analgesia is not tied to patient satisfaction, other than in the narrowest of circumstances described here.

“Lack of Association Between Press Ganey Emergency Department Patient Satisfaction Scores and Emergency Department Administration of Analgesic Medications”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24680237

Burn the ACC/AHA Low-Risk Chest Pain Guidelines

Management of low-risk chest pain is, by reasonable conjecture, one of the greatest failings of Emergency Medicine and the medical profession in general.  Whether driven by true altruism or by risk-management and zero-miss strategies based on the ACC/AHA guidelines, many, many, many patients are admitted and subjected to provocative testing.

And almost none of those patients are ultimately, correctly, diagnosed with the feared disease – acute coronary syndrome.

This is a prospective, observational evaluation of patients admitted for chest pain observation at a single academic center in Rhode Island.  Over the course of ~2 years, 3,543 patients were admitted for an initial evaluation of chest pain after initial negative cardiac biomarkers in the Emergency Department.  Approximately half of patients underwent stress testing.

Of 1,754 stress tests, there were 29 positives.  Of those, 9 were false positives.  Stratified by pretest probability, none of the patients with a “low probability” Diamond & Forrester Score had a true positive test.  Only 1% of patients admitted and stressed with “intermediate probability” D&F Score ultimately proved to have true positive tests.  Even with “high probability”, 5% of all stress tests performed were true positives.

The author of this article means to specifically reduce stress testing in the “low probability” cohort.  this is a reasonable proposal to skim off a small percentage of tests.  However, he misses asking the better question – how do we reduce use in our “intermediate probability” cohort, which constituted 85% of admissions with just a 1.7% yield for ACS?  We need to seriously address the outdated and inefficient notion admission and testing for these patients is the ideal strategy – and that probably starts by tossing our current guidelines out the window.

“The Association Between Pretest Probability of Coronary Artery Disease and Stress Test Utilization and Outcomes in a Chest Pain Observation Unit”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24730402