Spirometry use in Patients with Sickle Cell Disease with and without asthma and acute chest syndrome: A Multicenter Study.

Laurie Duckworth,L Vandy Black,Dima Ezmigna,Jeanette Green,Yingwei Yao,Shaun Grannis, Jeff Klann, Reuben Applegate, Gigi Lipori, Tanya Wallace,Diana J Wilkie

EJHaem(2020)

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摘要
A de-identified data repository of electronic medical record (EMR) data, i2b2 (Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside), including 4 geographically diverse academic medical centers, was queried to determine the use of diagnostic spirometry testing in African American children and young adults 5-34 years old with sickle cell disease (SCD) with or without a documented history of asthma and/or acute chest syndrome (ACS). A total of 2,749 patients were identified with SCD, of these 577 had asthma and 409 had ACS. Cross-referencing the CPT code for diagnostic spirometry showed that for patients identified as having SCD, a history or ACS, and a diagnosis of asthma, only 31% across all 4 centers had spirometry. Having an asthma diagnosis was associated with ACS. Among SCD patients with asthma, the proportion with ACS for the four centers was 47%, 75%, 38%, and 36% respectively. The bivariate association between asthma and ACS for each Center was significant for each (p<.001). To summarize, only one third of patients with co-morbid SCD, ACS, and asthma received the spirometry procedure as recommended in evidence-based guidelines, suggesting limited testing for changes in pulmonary function. Future studies to determine barriers and facilitators to implementation of pulmonary testing in SCD are warranted.
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关键词
asthma,pediatric hematology,sickle cell disease
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