The Canadian C-Spine Rule versus the NEXUS Low-Risk Criteria in Patients with Trauma

Ian G. Stiell(University of Ottawa), Catherine M. Clement, R.Douglas McKnight(University of British Columbia), Robert J. Brison(Queens University), Michael J. Schull(University of Toronto), Brian H. Rowe(University of Alberta), James Worthington, Mary A. Eisenhauer(Western University), Daniel T. Cass(University of Toronto), Gary H. Greenberg, Iain MacPhail(University of British Columbia), Jonathan Dreyer(Western University), Jacques Lee(University of Toronto), Glen Bandıera(University of Toronto), Mark Reardon, Brian R. Holroyd(University of Alberta), Howard Lesiuk(University of Ottawa), George A. Wells
New England Journal of Medicine
December 24, 2003
Cited by 653Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Canadian C-Spine (cervical-spine) Rule (CCR) and the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study (NEXUS) Low-Risk Criteria (NLC) are decision rules to guide the use of cervical-spine radiography in patients with trauma. It is unclear how the two decision rules compare in terms of clinical performance. METHODS: We conducted a prospective cohort study in nine Canadian emergency departments comparing the CCR and NLC as applied to alert patients with trauma who were in stable condition. The CCR and NLC were interpreted by 394 physicians for patients before radiography. RESULTS: Among the 8283 patients, 169 (2.0 percent) had clinically important cervical-spine injuries. In 845 (10.2 percent) of the patients, physicians did not evaluate range of motion as required by the CCR algorithm. In analyses that excluded these indeterminate cases, the CCR was more sensitive than the NLC (99.4 percent vs. 90.7 percent, P<0.001) and more specific (45.1 percent vs. 36.8 percent, P<0.001) for injury, and its use would have resulted in lower radiography rates (55.9 percent vs. 66.6 percent, P<0.001). In secondary analyses that included all patients, the sensitivity and specificity of CCR, assuming that the indeterminate cases were all positive, were 99.4 percent and 40.4 percent, respectively (P<0.001 for both comparisons with the NLC). Assuming that the CCR was negative for all indeterminate cases, these rates were 95.3 percent (P=0.09 for the comparison with the NLC) and 50.7 percent (P=0.001). The CCR would have missed 1 patient and the NLC would have missed 16 patients with important injuries. CONCLUSIONS: For alert patients with trauma who are in stable condition, the CCR is superior to the NLC with respect to sensitivity and specificity for cervical-spine injury, and its use would result in reduced rates of radiography.


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