Optimal management of adults with pharyngitis – a multi-criteria decision analysis
Open Access
- 13 March 2006
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
- Vol. 6 (1) , 14
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-6-14
Abstract
Background: Current practice guidelines offer different management recommendations for adults presenting with a sore throat. The key issue is the extent to which the clinical likelihood of a Group A streptococcal infection should affect patient management decisions. To help resolve this issue, we conducted a multi-criteria decision analysis using the Analytic Hierarchy Process. Methods: We defined optimal patient management using four criteria: 1) reduce symptom duration; 2) prevent infectious complications, local and systemic; 3) minimize antibiotic side effects, minor and anaphylaxis; and 4) achieve prudent use of antibiotics, avoiding both over-use and under-use. In our baseline analysis we assumed that all criteria and sub-criteria were equally important except minimizing anaphylactic side effects, which was judged very strongly more important than minimizing minor side effects. Management strategies included: a) No test, No treatment; b) Perform a rapid strep test and treat if positive; c) Perform a throat culture and treat if positive; d) Perform a rapid strep test and treat if positive; if negative obtain a throat culture and treat if positive; and e) treat without further tests. We defined four scenarios based on the likelihood of group A streptococcal infection using the Centor score, a well-validated clinical index. Published data were used to estimate the likelihoods of clinical outcomes and the test operating characteristics of the rapid strep test and throat culture for identifying group A streptococcal infections. Results: Using the baseline assumptions, no testing and no treatment is preferred for patients with Centor scores of 1; two strategies – culture and treat if positive and rapid strep with culture of negative results – are equally preferable for patients with Centor scores of 2; and rapid strep with culture of negative results is the best management strategy for patients with Centor scores 3 or 4. These results are sensitive to the priorities assigned to the decision criteria, especially avoiding over-use versus under-use of antibiotics, and the population prevalence of Group A streptococcal pharyngitis. Conclusion: The optimal clinical management of adults with sore throat depends on both the clinical probability of a group A streptococcal infection and clinical judgments that incorporate individual patient and practice circumstances.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Antibiotics for sore throatPublished by Wiley ,2004
- Practice Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Group A Streptococcal PharyngitisClinical Infectious Diseases, 2002
- Randomized Controlled Trial of a Patient Decision Aid for Colorectal Cancer ScreeningMedical Decision Making, 2002
- Randomized Controlled Trial of a Patient Decision Aid for Colorectal Cancer ScreeningMedical Decision Making, 2002
- Principles of Appropriate Antibiotic Use for Acute Pharyngitis in AdultsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2001
- Does This Patient Have Strep Throat?JAMA, 2000
- The Analytic Hierarchy Process in Medical Decision MakingMedical Decision Making, 1989
- What a difference a day makesJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1987
- The prediction of streptococcal pharyngitis in adultsJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1986
- The Diagnosis of Strep Throat in Adults in the Emergency RoomMedical Decision Making, 1981