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The Danish Study Group of Infections of the Brain is a collaboration between all departments of infectious diseases in Denmark. The investigators aim to monitor epidemiological trends in central nervous system (CNS) infections by a prospective registration of clinical characteristics and outcome of all adult (>17 years of age) patients with community-acquired CNS infections diagnosed and/or treated at departments of infectious diseases in Denmark since 1st of January 2015.
Full description
The investigators include data on diagnosis at admission, symptoms and signs on admission, character and timing of diagnostic work-up and treatment and outcome assessed by the Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS).
Diagnostic work-up and treatment is left at the discretion of the local physician and therefore not standardised
In general any symptoms/deficits should only be listed if they are 'new' to the patient, e.g. a known palsy of the facial nerve should not be listed as a new relevant finding at admission. On the other hand, worsening of a known neurological deficit should be listed under signs in the given instrument (bacterial meningitis, encephalitis, neuroborreliosis etc). Likewise, for outcome only changes in pre-morbid conditions should be listed including place of residence, functional status, neurological deficits etc.
Time of admission is obtained in prioritized order from the ambulance charts or notifications of arrival by secretaries or nurses in the emergency departments. Timing of lumbar puncture and cranial imaging is extracted from the electronic records at the departments of biochemistry or radiology while timing of antibiotic therapy for meningitis is identified in electronic medication systems. Time to lumbar puncture, cranial imaging and antibiotic therapy is calculated as time from arrival at hospital to each of the above events.
Quality control of case enrollment is ensured by ad hoc case-to-case discussions and at study group meetings 2-3 times a year
To ensure completeness of reported CNS infections annual searches of selected International Classification of Diseases version 10 (ICD-10) codes are performed in local administrative databases at each department:
A17 A32.1 A32.7 A39.0 A52.1-52.3 A69.2 (neuroborreliosis) A83 A84 A85 A87 A89 B00.3-00.4 B01.0-01.1 B02.0-02.0 B582 B451 B375 G00 G01 G02 G03 G04 G05 G06 G07
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Definitions of central nervous system infections:
For all cases with unproven aetiologies no alternative diagnosis than CNS infection is thought more likely after completed multidisciplinary diagnostic work-up.
Viral meningitis inclusion criteria
and
Cerebrospinal fluid leukocytes>10 cells/ml
Patients with viral meningitis with undetermined pathogen have to have:
In case of doubt, patients are discussed with the DASGIB secretary and chair or at meetings.
Bacterial meningitis inclusion criteria - All patients have to have a clinical presentation consistent with bacterial meningitis (e.g. headache, neck stiffness, fever, altered mental status)
and
Proven bacterial aetiology (CSF or blood culture/DNA based technology or antigen tests)
Patients with bacterial meningitis in whom the bacteria cannot not be cultured or identified by DNA-based technologies have to have:
In case of doubt, patients are discussed with the DASGIB secretary and chair or at meetings.
Encephalitis inclusion criteria - All patients have to have a clinical presentation consistent with encephalitis (e.g. headache, fever, focal neurological deficit, altered mental status >24 hours) as defined by the International Encephalitis Consortium (Venkatesan A et al., Clin Infect Dis 2013; doi:10.1093/cid/cit458.).
Encephalitis exclusion criteria
Primary brain abscess inclusion criteria
and
or
or
or
or
Lyme neuroborreliosis inclusion criteria
and
and
Neurosyphilis inclusion criteria - A clinical presentation consistent with neurosyphilis (e.g. 'encephalitis-like symptoms', dementia, ocular or otogenic syphilis)
and either
or
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Central trial contact
Jacob Bodilsen, MD; Henrik Nielsen, Professor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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