Overdiagnosis of urinary tract infection linked to overdiagnosis of pneumonia: a multihospital cohort study.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-2022
Publication Title
BMJ quality & safety
Abstract
Urinary tract infection (UTI) and community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) are the most common infections treated in hospitals. UTI and CAP are also commonly overdiagnosed, resulting in unnecessary antibiotic use and diagnostic delays. While much is known individually about overdiagnosis of UTI and CAP, it is not known whether hospitals with higher overdiagnosis of one also have higher overdiagnosis of the other. Correlation of overdiagnosis of these two conditions may indicate underlying hospital-level contributors, which in turn may represent targets for intervention. To evaluate the association of overdiagnosis of UTI and CAP, we first determined the proportion of hospitalised patients treated for CAP or UTI at 46 hospitals in Michigan who were overdiagnosed according to national guideline definitions. Then, we used Pearson's correlation coefficient to compare hospital proportions of overdiagnosis of CAP and UTI. Finally, we assessed for 'diagnostic momentum' (ie, accepting a previous diagnosis without sufficient scepticism) by determining how often overdiagnosed patients remained on antibiotics on day 3 of hospitalisation. We included 14 085 patients treated for CAP (11.4% were overdiagnosed) and 10 398 patients treated for UTI (27.8% were overdiagnosed) across 46 hospitals. Within hospitals, the proportion of patients overdiagnosed with UTI was moderately correlated with the proportion of patients overdiagnosed with CAP (r=0.53, p
Volume
31
Issue
5
First Page
383
Last Page
386
Recommended Citation
Gupta A, Petty L, Gandhi T, Flanders S, Hsaiky L, Basu T, et al Overdiagnosis of urinary tract infection linked to overdiagnosis of pneumonia: a multihospital cohort study. BMJ Qual Saf. 2022 May;31(5):383-386. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2021-013565. PMID: 34987084.
DOI
10.1136/bmjqs-2021-013565
ISSN
2044-5423
PubMed ID
34987084