2013-12-11
Red flags to screen for malignancy and fracture in patients with low back pain: Systematic review
Publication
Publication
BMJ (Online) , Volume 347
Abstract
Objective To review the evidence on diagnostic accuracy of red flag
signs and symptoms to screen for fracture or malignancy in patients
presenting with low back pain to primary, secondary, or tertiary care.
Design Systematic review.
Data sources Medline, OldMedline, Embase, and CINAHL from earliest
available up to 1 October 2013.
Inclusion criteria Primary diagnostic studies comparing red flags for
fracture or malignancy to an acceptable reference standard, published
in any language.
Review methods Assessment of study quality and extraction of data
was conducted by three independent assessors. Diagnostic accuracy
statistics and post-test probabilities were generated for each red flag.
Results We included 14 studies (eight from primary care, two from
secondary care, four from tertiary care) evaluating 53 red flags; only five
studies evaluated combinations of red flags. Pooling of data was not
possible because of index test heterogeneity. Many red flags in current
guidelines provide virtually no change in probability of fracture or
malignancy or have untested diagnostic accuracy. The red flags with
the highest post-test probability for detection of fracture were older age
(9%, 95% confidence interval 3% to 25%), prolonged use of corticosteroid
drugs (33%, 10% to 67%), severe trauma (11%, 8% to 16%), and
presence of a contusion or abrasion (62%, 49% to 74%). Probability of
spinal fracture was higher when multiple red flags were present (90%,
34% to 99%). The red flag with the highest post-test probability for
detection of spinal malignancy was history of malignancy (33%, 22% to
46%).
Conclusions While several red flags are endorsed in guidelines to
screen for fracture or malignancy, only a small subset of these have
evidence that they are indeed informative. These findings suggest a
need for revision of many current guidelines.
Additional Metadata | |
---|---|
doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f7095, hdl.handle.net/1765/72777 | |
BMJ (Online) | |
Organisation | Department of General Practice |
Downie, A., Williams, C., Henschke, N., Hancock, M. J., Ostelo, R., de Vet, H., … Maher, C. (2013). Red flags to screen for malignancy and fracture in patients with low back pain: Systematic review. BMJ (Online), 347. doi:10.1136/bmj.f7095 |