EBQ:San Francisco Syncope Rule
Under Review Journal Club Article
Quinn J. et al.. "Prospective validation of the San Francisco Syncope Rule to predict patients with serious outcomes". Ann Emerg Med. 2006. 31(26):2992-6.
PubMed Full text PDF
PubMed Full text PDF
Clinical Question
Can the San Francisco Syncope Rule be used in clinical practice to risk stratify patients presenting with syncope?
Conclusion
- The San Francisco Syncope Rule demonstrated to be highly sensitive (98% sensitivity, 95% CI 89-100%) but not very specific (56%, 95% CI 52-60%) for predicting serious outcomes.
Major Points
- Criteria (CHESS Pneumonic)[1]
- CHF History
- Hct < 30%
- ECG Abnormality
- SOB history
- SBP < 90mmHg at triage
The rule is positive if any of the above apply to the patient.
Study Design
- A prospective cohort study
- N=791
- Consecutive patients with syncope or near syncope presenting to an emergency department of a large, urban teaching hospital were identified and enrolled from July 15, 2002 to August 31, 2004
- Physicians prospectively applied the San Francisco Syncope Rule
- Patient follow up performed to determine if the patient suffered a predefined serious outcome within 30 days of their ED visit
- Physicians completed a short Web-based form and enrolled patients after their assessment
- Study investigators reviewed all data forms in order to ensure the correct interpretation of the rule
- 30 day follow-up completed after patients' index ED visit to determine short-term outcomes that would require admission
- Short-term serious outcomes defined as:
- Death
- Myocardial Infarction
- Arrhythmia
- Pulmonary Embolism
- Stoke
- Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
- Significant Hemorrhage or Anemia Requiring Transfusion
- Procedural intervention to treat a related cause of syncope or any condition causing or likely to cause a return ED visit
- Hospitalization for a related event
- Short-term serious outcomes defined as:
Population
Patient Demographics
- 364 men, 427 females
- Mean age: 61
- Admitted: 469
- Patients with serious outcomes after ED visit: 54 (6.8%)
- Death: 3
- Arrhythmia: 23
- Myocardial Infarction: 11
- Valvular Heart Disease: 1
- Significant Hemorrhage: 7
- TIA/Stroke: 3
- Sepsis: 3
- Admission after ED Discharge : 3
Inclusion Criteria
- Consecutive patients presenting with syncope or near syncope without any of the predefined exclusion criteria
Exclusion Criteria
- Trauma-related loss of consciousness
- Alcohol-related loss of consciousness
- Drug-related loss of consciousness
- Definite seizure
Interventions
Outcomes
Primary Outcome
Secondary Outcomes
Subgroup analysis
Criticisms & Further Discussion
Funding
- A career development grant from the National Institutes of Health available to Dr. James Quinn, MD, MS, primary investigator of the study
Sources
- ↑ Quinn J, McDermott D, Stiell I, Kohn M, Wells G. Prospective validation of the San Francisco Syncope Rule to predict patients with serious outcomes. Ann Emerg Med. 2006 May;47(5):448-54. PubMed PMID: 16631985.
