Predictive performance of the common red flags in emergency department headache patients: a HEAD and HEAD-Colombia study

Author:

Chu Kevin,Kelly Anne-MareeORCID,Kuan Win Sen,Kinnear Frances B,Keijzers Gerben,Horner DanielORCID,Laribi Said,Cardozo Alejandro,Karamercan Mehmet Akif,Klim Sharon,Wijeratne Tissa,Kamona Sinan,Graham Colin A,Body RichardORCID,Roberts TomORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesOnly a small proportion of patients presenting to an ED with headache have a serious cause. The SNNOOP10 criteria, which incorporates red and orange flags for serious causes, has been proposed but not well studied. This project aims to compare the proportion of patients with 10 commonly accepted red flag criteria (singly and in combination) between patients with and without a diagnosis of serious secondary headache in a large, multinational cohort of ED patients presenting with headache.MethodsSecondary analysis of data obtained in the HEAD and HEAD-Colombia studies. The outcome of interest was serious secondary headache. The predictive performance of 10 red flag criteria from the SNNOOP10 criteria list was estimated individually and in combination.Results5293 patients were included, of whom 6.1% (95% CI 5.5% to 6.8%) had a defined serious cause identified. New neurological deficit, history of neoplasm, older age (>50 years) and recent head trauma (2–7 days prior) were independent predictors of a serious secondary headache diagnosis. After adjusting for other predictors, sudden onset, onset during exertion, pregnancy and immune suppression were not associated with a serious headache diagnosis. The combined sensitivity of the red flag criteria overall was 96.5% (95% CI 93.2% to 98.3%) but specificity was low, 5.1% (95% CI 4.3% to 6.0%). Positive predictive value was 9.3% (95% CI 8.2% to 10.5%) with negative predictive value of 93.5% (95% CI 87.6% to 96.8%).ConclusionThe sensitivity and specificity of the red flag criteria in this study were lower than previously reported. Regarding clinical practice, this suggests that red flag criteria may be useful to identify patients at higher risk of a serious secondary headache cause, but their low specificity could result in increased rates of CT scanning.Trial registration numberANZCTR376695.

Funder

Royal College of Emergency Medicine

Publisher

BMJ

Reference13 articles.

1. Epidemiology, investigation, management, and outcome of headache in emergency departments (HEAD study)—A multinational observational study

2. Epidemiology of headache in a neurological emergency department in medellin, Colombia;Cardozo;Headache Med,2023

3. National Clinical Guideline Centre (UK) . Headaches: diagnosis and management of headaches in young people and adults. NICE clinical guidelines, no. 150. London Royal College of Physicians (UK); 2012.

4. American Headache Society . Red flags in headache—what if it isn’t migraine? Available: https://americanheadachesociety.org/news/red-flags-in-headache-what-if-it-isnt-migraine/ [Accessed 4 Jan 2023].

5. Red and orange flags for secondary headaches in clinical practice: SNNOOP10 list;Do;Neurology,2019

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