Selected article for: "abdominal pain and acute respiratory symptom"

Author: Mao, Yinan; Tan, Yi-Roe; Thein, Tun Linn; Chai, Yi Ann Louis; Cook, Alex R.; Dickens, Borame L.; Lew, Yii Jen; Lim, Fong Seng; Lim, Jue Tao; Sun, Yinxiaohe; Sundaram, Meena; Soh, Alexius; Tan, Glorijoy Shi En; Wong, Franco Pey Gein; Young, Barnaby; Zeng, Kangwei; Chen, Mark; Ong, Desmond Luan Seng
Title: Identifying COVID-19 cases in outpatient settings
  • Cord-id: su1pb7w6
  • Document date: 2021_4_5
  • ID: su1pb7w6
    Snippet: Case identification is an ongoing issue for the COVID-19 epidemic, in particular for outpatient care where physicians must decide which patients to prioritise for further testing. This paper reports tools to classify patients based on symptom profiles based on 236 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 positive cases and 564 controls, accounting for the time course of illness using generalised multivariate logistic regression. Significant symptoms included abdominal pain, cough, diarrho
    Document: Case identification is an ongoing issue for the COVID-19 epidemic, in particular for outpatient care where physicians must decide which patients to prioritise for further testing. This paper reports tools to classify patients based on symptom profiles based on 236 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 positive cases and 564 controls, accounting for the time course of illness using generalised multivariate logistic regression. Significant symptoms included abdominal pain, cough, diarrhoea, fever, headache, muscle ache, runny nose, sore throat, temperature between 37.5 and 37.9 °C and temperature above 38 °C, but their importance varied by day of illness at assessment. With a high percentile threshold for specificity at 0.95, the baseline model had reasonable sensitivity at 0.67. To further evaluate accuracy of model predictions, leave-one-out cross-validation confirmed high classification accuracy with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.92. For the baseline model, sensitivity decreased to 0.56. External validation datasets reported similar result. Our study provides a tool to discern COVID-19 patients from controls using symptoms and day from illness onset with good predictive performance. It could be considered as a framework to complement laboratory testing in order to differentiate COVID-19 from other patients presenting with acute symptoms in outpatient care.

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