Reassessment of the Role of Race in Calculating the Risk for Urinary Tract Infection: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
Reassessment of the Role of Race in Calculating the Risk for Urinary Tract Infection: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
IMPORTANCE
A previously reported prediction model included a child's race to estimate risk of urinary tract infection (UTI), but race-conscious medicine encourages investigating how race is likely to be a proxy for other factors that should instead be used for risk prediction.
OBJECTIVES
To systematically review the available literature to evaluate the robustness of the association between race and UTI and to assess whether other variables could replace race as a variable in a previously developed prediction tool without adversely affecting its accuracy.
DATA SOURCE
MEDLINE was searched through May 28, 2021.
STUDY SELECTION
English-language studies that reported data on the prevalence of UTI according to race for children younger than 18 years were included.
DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS
Two independent reviewers assessed studies for risk of bias and abstracted data. Random-effects models were used to pool odds ratios, and meta-regression was used to explore heterogeneity.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES
Odds of UTI among non-Black children vs Black children.
RESULTS
Sixteen studies (17 845 children) were included. In the primary analysis, which included 11 studies, the pooled odds ratio of UTI among non-Black children was 2.44-fold higher (95% CI, 1.87-3.20) than among Black children. The corresponding odds ratio in studies with low or very low risk of bias was 4.84-fold higher (95% CI, 3.16-7.41; I2 = 0%) among non-Black children than among Black children. Replacing race with history of UTI and duration of fever resulted in a model with similar accuracy (training cohort: overall sensitivity, 96% [95% CI, 94%-98%]; overall specificity, 35% [95%, 32%-38%]; overall area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.80 [95% CI, 0.77-0.82]; validation cohort: overall sensitivity, 97% [95% CI, 90%-100%]; overall specificity, 32% [95% CI, 26%-37%]; overall area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.84 [95% CI, 0.77-0.92]).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE
Although previous studies suggested that an association between race and UTI exists, because of the issues associated with the inclusion of race in decision models, we replaced the variable of race with history of UTI and duration of fever in a previously developed risk prediction model and found similar accuracy.