Abstract

BackgroundThere is no consensus on the most accurate combination of diagnostic criteria to define community acquired pneumonia (CAP). We describe inclusion criteria in randomized controlled trials (RCT) of CAP and assess their performance for the diagnosis of formally identified CAP.MethodsRCTs related to CAP recorded on ClinicalTrials.gov were analysed. Due to high heterogeneity, we divided close CAP inclusion criteria into patterns (i.e. combinations of inclusion criteria). To assess their diagnostic performances, these CAP definition patterns were applied to a reference population of 319 suspected CAP patients, in whom the CAP diagnosis had been confirmed (n = 163) or excluded (n = 156) by an adjudication committee after a systematic thoracic CT-scan and a 28-day follow-up period.ResultsIn the 47 RCTs included in the analysis, 42 different CAP inclusion criteria combinations were identified and 8 patterns created. This heterogeneity was not explained either by the trials’ methodology or by their objectives. When applied to the reference population, the performance ranges of the 8 definition patterns were 9.8–56.4% for sensitivities, 56.4 97.4% for specificities, 63.6 83.6% for positive predictive values and 50.8–66.7% for negative predictive values. None of the CAP definitions had both sensitivity and specificity superior to 65%. Depending on the CAP definition, the rate of included patients without CAP (“false positives”) ranged from 1 to 21%.ConclusionsCAP diagnostic criteria within RCTs are heterogeneous, which may have far-reaching consequences on validity of RCT results.

Highlights

  • There is no consensus on the most accurate combination of diagnostic criteria to define community acquired pneumonia (CAP)

  • The full diagnostic criteria for CAP were obtained in 47 out of the 77 (61%) trials; these 47 trials were included in the analysis: in 32/47 trials (68%), diagnostic criteria were correctly described in ClinicalTrials.gov database; in 8 (17%) they were obtained after

  • In this study, we report the considerable heterogeneity of CAP inclusion criteria in randomized controlled trials (RCT) and, by applying these criteria to a reference population, explored through systematic CT-scan, we underline the potential risk of inclusion of patients without CAP, in RCTs focused on CAP

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Summary

Introduction

There is no consensus on the most accurate combination of diagnostic criteria to define community acquired pneumonia (CAP). The lack of universal CAP diagnostic criteria might have consequences for clinical practice, epidemiological analyses, and validity of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). In this context, a true and powerful evaluation of an intervention obviously requires the inclusion of a sufficient number of individuals truly presenting the targeted disease and representative of the entire infected population. A true and powerful evaluation of an intervention obviously requires the inclusion of a sufficient number of individuals truly presenting the targeted disease and representative of the entire infected population This is even more true in non-inferiority trials, a frequently-used methodology in CAP RCTs [10], in which the inclusion of patients without the targeted disease might result in inaccurate estimation of the difference between arms of studies and an incorrect conclusion of non-inferiority of the evaluated intervention. An assessment of existing diagnostic criteria for CAP is essential for clinical research

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