Purpose: To report outcomes of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with new-onset visual flashes and/or floaters following implementation of a formalized triage protocol allowing eligible patients to be discharged for prompt outpatient ophthalmic examination.
Design: Retrospective consecutive case series.
Methods: Patient characteristics, protocol eligibility, and clinical outcomes were recorded for adult patients triaged within a formal "flashes and floaters" protocol at a single academic ED.
Results: A total of 457 patients presented for 471 unique ED encounters with a chief complaint of visual flashes and/or floaters between October 2014 and May 2018. In all, 61% of patient encounters (287/471) met protocol criteria for prompt outpatient ophthalmic examination, of whom 94% (269/287) were examined within 48 hours. Final diagnoses of protocol-eligible patients were posterior vitreous detachment only (73%, 197/269), retinal break(s) (10%, 26/269), migraine (5%, 14/269), and no cause or new cause found (10%, 27/269). No protocol-eligible patients had retinal detachment or diagnoses requiring emergent diagnostic or therapeutic care (0%, 95% CI = 0%-1.1%). Final diagnoses following 175 encounters not meeting criteria for deferred examination included posterior vitreous detachment only (25%, 43/175), retinal break(s) (19%, 33/175), macula-involving retinal detachment (13%, 22/175), macula-sparing retinal detachment (11%, 19/175), retinal arterial occlusion (2%, 3/175), and stroke (0.6%, 1/175). The Cohen kappa for agreement on protocol eligibility between the ED physician and ophthalmologist was 0.85.
Conclusions: A formalized ED "flashes and floaters" triage protocol may help identify patients for whom prompt outpatient ophthalmic examination may be more safely considered.
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