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#438 - 🔵 [PAS 2026] - Do Febrile Infants in Their First Month of Life Still Need a Lumbar Puncture?

Season 5 Episode 64 Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
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Dr. Nathan Kupperman and Dr. Brett Bernstein, lead investigators on a landmark international pooled analysis published in JAMA, present the most comprehensive evidence to date on whether a lumbar puncture can be safely avoided in febrile infants under one month of age. Using a simple three-criteria rule — negative urinalysis, procalcitonin of 0.5 or below, and absolute neutrophil count of 4,000 or below — across more than 2,500 prospectively collected cases from multiple international cohorts, the rule did not miss a single case of bacterial meningitis. They explain what this means for shared decision-making with families, why the number needed to perform a lumbar puncture to identify one case of bacterial meningitis is now vanishingly close to infinity for low-risk infants, and why implementing this approach requires a multidisciplinary coalition across emergency medicine, infectious disease, and inpatient teams before any individual physician changes their practice.

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