Nurse-charted AF in the EHR accurately identified atrial fibrillation events with 93% sensitivity (95% CI: 87%-100%) and 87% specificity compared to gold-standard manual ECG review.
Observational (n=142)
Blinded to AF status
No
Does nurse-charted documentation accurately identify atrial fibrillation occurrence and onset time compared to gold-standard ECG review in ICU patients with sepsis?
Nurse charting in the electronic health record is a highly sensitive and specific method for identifying atrial fibrillation and its onset time in ICU patients, offering better temporal precision than ICD-9 codes.
Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) portends poor prognoses in intensive care unit patients with sepsis. However, AF research is challenging: Previous studies demonstrate that International Classification of Disease ( ICD) codes may underestimate the incidence of AF, but chart review is expensive and often not feasible. We aim to examine the accuracy of nurse-charted AF and its temporal precision in critical care patients with sepsis. Methods: Patients with sepsis with continuous electrocardiogram (ECG) waveforms were identified from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC-III) database, a de-identified, single-center intensive care unit electronic health record (EHR) source. We selected a random sample of ECGs of 6 to 50 hours’ duration for manual review. Nurse-charted AF occurrence and onset time and ICD-9-coded AF were compared to gold-standard ECG adjudication by a board-certified cardiac electrophysiologist blinded to AF status. Descriptive statistics were calculated for all variables in patients diagnosed with AF by nurse charting, ICD-9 code, or both. Results: From 142 ECG waveforms (58 AF and 84 sinus rhythm), nurse charting identified AF events with 93% sensitivity (95% confidence interval CI: 87%-100%) and 87% specificity (95% CI: 80%-94%) compared to the gold standard manual ECG review. Furthermore, nurse-charted AF onset time was within 1 hour of expert reader onset time for 85% of the reviewed tracings. The ICD-9 codes were 97% sensitive (95% CI: 88-100%) and 82% specific (95% CI: 74-90%) for incident AF during admission but unable to identify AF time of onset. Conclusion: Nurse documentation of AF in EHR is accurate and has high precision for determining AF onset to within 1 hour. Our study suggests that nurse-charted AF in the EHR represents a potentially novel method for AF case identification, timing, and burden estimation.
Ding et al. (Sun,) conducted a observational in Atrial fibrillation in sepsis (n=142). Nurse-charted AF and ICD-9-coded AF vs. Gold-standard manual ECG review was evaluated on Sensitivity of nurse-charted AF events compared to gold standard manual ECG review (95% CI 87%-100%). Nurse-charted AF in the EHR accurately identified atrial fibrillation events with 93% sensitivity (95% CI: 87%-100%) and 87% specificity compared to gold-standard manual ECG review.