Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease

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Standard

Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease. / Sørensen, T. M.; Holmslykke, M.; Nordlund, M.; Siersma, V.; Jessen, L. R.

I: Veterinary Journal, Bind 247, 2019, s. 65-70.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sørensen, TM, Holmslykke, M, Nordlund, M, Siersma, V & Jessen, LR 2019, 'Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease', Veterinary Journal, bind 247, s. 65-70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003

APA

Sørensen, T. M., Holmslykke, M., Nordlund, M., Siersma, V., & Jessen, L. R. (2019). Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease. Veterinary Journal, 247, 65-70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003

Vancouver

Sørensen TM, Holmslykke M, Nordlund M, Siersma V, Jessen LR. Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease. Veterinary Journal. 2019;247:65-70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003

Author

Sørensen, T. M. ; Holmslykke, M. ; Nordlund, M. ; Siersma, V. ; Jessen, L. R. / Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease. I: Veterinary Journal. 2019 ; Bind 247. s. 65-70.

Bibtex

@article{e5e37dd76d8c47b990687266e37e6a8a,
title = "Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease",
abstract = "Clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease in dogs are characteristic but non-specific for infection. It has been hypothesized that age, sex and neuter status influences the prevalence of urinary tract infection (UTI), but the predictive value of the combined clinical presentation has not been explored in dogs. The aim of the study was to assess clinical predictors (sex/neuter status, age, dysuria/stranguria, pollakiuria, macroscopic hematuria, malodorous urine and history of recurrent UTI) for bacterial cystitis, and to develop a clinical decision rule. Data was retrieved from medical records (retrospective cases) or from standardized recording sheets (prospective cases). Bacterial cystitis was defined as significant bacteriuria on quantitative bacterial culture in dogs with compatible clinical signs of urinary tract disease. Dogs of any breed, sex and age were included. A total of 1727 microbiology records were screened and 424 samples were included in the analysis. Bacterial cystitis was confirmed in 46% of the cases. Four variables predicted bacterial cystitis: sex/neuter status, age, pollakiuria and hematuria. A score was designated to each variable and a clinical rule was constructed. This rule attained an AUC of 0.75 and had sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 55% at its optimal cut-off (score ≥2.0). A score cut-off of ≥3.0 had a positive predictive value of 70%. Several factors predicted bacterial cystitis, but the clinical rule had only modest predictive value. Other variables or point-of-care test results should be included in future research to optimize overall precision.",
keywords = "Canine, Clinical rule, Sensitivity, Specificity, UTI",
author = "S{\o}rensen, {T. M.} and M. Holmslykke and M. Nordlund and V. Siersma and Jessen, {L. R.}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003",
language = "English",
volume = "247",
pages = "65--70",
journal = "The Veterinary Journal",
issn = "1090-0233",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pre-test probability of urinary tract infection in dogs with clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease

AU - Sørensen, T. M.

AU - Holmslykke, M.

AU - Nordlund, M.

AU - Siersma, V.

AU - Jessen, L. R.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease in dogs are characteristic but non-specific for infection. It has been hypothesized that age, sex and neuter status influences the prevalence of urinary tract infection (UTI), but the predictive value of the combined clinical presentation has not been explored in dogs. The aim of the study was to assess clinical predictors (sex/neuter status, age, dysuria/stranguria, pollakiuria, macroscopic hematuria, malodorous urine and history of recurrent UTI) for bacterial cystitis, and to develop a clinical decision rule. Data was retrieved from medical records (retrospective cases) or from standardized recording sheets (prospective cases). Bacterial cystitis was defined as significant bacteriuria on quantitative bacterial culture in dogs with compatible clinical signs of urinary tract disease. Dogs of any breed, sex and age were included. A total of 1727 microbiology records were screened and 424 samples were included in the analysis. Bacterial cystitis was confirmed in 46% of the cases. Four variables predicted bacterial cystitis: sex/neuter status, age, pollakiuria and hematuria. A score was designated to each variable and a clinical rule was constructed. This rule attained an AUC of 0.75 and had sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 55% at its optimal cut-off (score ≥2.0). A score cut-off of ≥3.0 had a positive predictive value of 70%. Several factors predicted bacterial cystitis, but the clinical rule had only modest predictive value. Other variables or point-of-care test results should be included in future research to optimize overall precision.

AB - Clinical signs of lower urinary tract disease in dogs are characteristic but non-specific for infection. It has been hypothesized that age, sex and neuter status influences the prevalence of urinary tract infection (UTI), but the predictive value of the combined clinical presentation has not been explored in dogs. The aim of the study was to assess clinical predictors (sex/neuter status, age, dysuria/stranguria, pollakiuria, macroscopic hematuria, malodorous urine and history of recurrent UTI) for bacterial cystitis, and to develop a clinical decision rule. Data was retrieved from medical records (retrospective cases) or from standardized recording sheets (prospective cases). Bacterial cystitis was defined as significant bacteriuria on quantitative bacterial culture in dogs with compatible clinical signs of urinary tract disease. Dogs of any breed, sex and age were included. A total of 1727 microbiology records were screened and 424 samples were included in the analysis. Bacterial cystitis was confirmed in 46% of the cases. Four variables predicted bacterial cystitis: sex/neuter status, age, pollakiuria and hematuria. A score was designated to each variable and a clinical rule was constructed. This rule attained an AUC of 0.75 and had sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 55% at its optimal cut-off (score ≥2.0). A score cut-off of ≥3.0 had a positive predictive value of 70%. Several factors predicted bacterial cystitis, but the clinical rule had only modest predictive value. Other variables or point-of-care test results should be included in future research to optimize overall precision.

KW - Canine

KW - Clinical rule

KW - Sensitivity

KW - Specificity

KW - UTI

U2 - 10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003

DO - 10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.03.003

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30971354

AN - SCOPUS:85063136230

VL - 247

SP - 65

EP - 70

JO - The Veterinary Journal

JF - The Veterinary Journal

SN - 1090-0233

ER -

ID: 216923551