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Towards clinical definitions of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) for research and primary care practice in Europe: an international consensus study

Towards clinical definitions of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) for research and primary care practice in Europe: an international consensus study
Towards clinical definitions of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) for research and primary care practice in Europe: an international consensus study
AIMS: Antibiotic prescriptions for lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) account for a large proportion of antibiotic consumption. Many of these prescriptions do not benefit patients and contribute to antibiotic resistance. Research to improve evidence-based management requires clear definitions of clinical entities. We aimed to generate definitions for common LRTIs that are applicable to clinical practice and low-intensity investigation research settings in European primary care.

METHODS: Candidate definitions identified through a systematic review and a nominal group meeting were put to a Delphi panel of selected experts from Europe and the US over three rounds. The definitions achieving high consensus were then tested for face validity by an expert panel.

RESULTS: 253 papers met our search criteria. The nominal group meeting generated highly-ranked definitions for two LRTIs. The Delphi panel considered five candidate definitions derived from the systematic review and nominal group meeting, and agreed upon definitions and open comments that the expert panel assessed for face validity.

CONCLUSIONS: We combined empirical evidence with expert opinion for the development of a set of relevant clinical and research definitions for the four most common LRTIs presenting in general practice.
exacerbation, asthma, copd, diagnosis, infection, pneumonia, primary care, lrti, bronchitis, definition, research
1471-4418
299-306
Greene, G.
5b39e788-18c1-42ba-92f7-fd8d206a6630
Hood, K.
12e14eb3-2c75-409f-a69d-add733644d89
Little, P.
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Verheij, T.
cc355b92-ba85-4102-98a0-cee55f0504f6
Goossens, H.
533640f7-b568-4d95-a7c1-28158d154ba8
Coenen, S.
9afe2a52-9f4f-45bb-b8e5-c6ee3eeb3498
Butler, C.C.
736f78ad-3e18-4c63-900f-c2249577b645
Greene, G.
5b39e788-18c1-42ba-92f7-fd8d206a6630
Hood, K.
12e14eb3-2c75-409f-a69d-add733644d89
Little, P.
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Verheij, T.
cc355b92-ba85-4102-98a0-cee55f0504f6
Goossens, H.
533640f7-b568-4d95-a7c1-28158d154ba8
Coenen, S.
9afe2a52-9f4f-45bb-b8e5-c6ee3eeb3498
Butler, C.C.
736f78ad-3e18-4c63-900f-c2249577b645

Greene, G., Hood, K., Little, P., Verheij, T., Goossens, H., Coenen, S. and Butler, C.C. (2011) Towards clinical definitions of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) for research and primary care practice in Europe: an international consensus study. Primary Care Respiratory Journal, 20 (3), 299-306. (doi:10.4104/pcrj.2011.00034). (PMID:21509421)

Record type: Article

Abstract

AIMS: Antibiotic prescriptions for lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) account for a large proportion of antibiotic consumption. Many of these prescriptions do not benefit patients and contribute to antibiotic resistance. Research to improve evidence-based management requires clear definitions of clinical entities. We aimed to generate definitions for common LRTIs that are applicable to clinical practice and low-intensity investigation research settings in European primary care.

METHODS: Candidate definitions identified through a systematic review and a nominal group meeting were put to a Delphi panel of selected experts from Europe and the US over three rounds. The definitions achieving high consensus were then tested for face validity by an expert panel.

RESULTS: 253 papers met our search criteria. The nominal group meeting generated highly-ranked definitions for two LRTIs. The Delphi panel considered five candidate definitions derived from the systematic review and nominal group meeting, and agreed upon definitions and open comments that the expert panel assessed for face validity.

CONCLUSIONS: We combined empirical evidence with expert opinion for the development of a set of relevant clinical and research definitions for the four most common LRTIs presenting in general practice.

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More information

Published date: September 2011
Keywords: exacerbation, asthma, copd, diagnosis, infection, pneumonia, primary care, lrti, bronchitis, definition, research
Organisations: Primary Care & Population Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 350015
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/350015
ISSN: 1471-4418
PURE UUID: 9adff3f7-59ee-40ca-b049-6bf015679f12

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Date deposited: 15 Mar 2013 16:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:19

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Contributors

Author: G. Greene
Author: K. Hood
Author: P. Little
Author: T. Verheij
Author: H. Goossens
Author: S. Coenen
Author: C.C. Butler

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