Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock

<b>Background</b> : New scoring systems, including the Rapid Emergency Medicine Score (REMS), the Mortality in Emergency Department Sepsis (MEDS) score, and the confusion, urea nitrogen, respiratory rate, blood pressure, 65 years and older (CURB-65) score, have been developed for emergen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Crowe Colleen, Kulstad Erik, Mistry Chintan, Kulstad Christine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2010-01-01
Series:Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.onlinejets.org/article.asp?issn=0974-2700;year=2010;volume=3;issue=4;spage=342;epage=347;aulast=Crowe
id doaj-153a34699bc446258c218a78161c8c59
record_format Article
spelling doaj-153a34699bc446258c218a78161c8c592020-11-24T22:25:51ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock0974-27000974-519X2010-01-0134342347Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shockCrowe ColleenKulstad ErikMistry ChintanKulstad Christine<b>Background</b> : New scoring systems, including the Rapid Emergency Medicine Score (REMS), the Mortality in Emergency Department Sepsis (MEDS) score, and the confusion, urea nitrogen, respiratory rate, blood pressure, 65 years and older (CURB-65) score, have been developed for emergency department (ED) use in various patient populations. Increasing use of early goal directed therapy (EGDT) for the emergent treatment of sepsis introduces a growing population of patients in which the accuracy of these scoring systems has not been widely examined. <b>Objectives</b> : To evaluate the ability of the REMS, MEDS score, and CURB-65 score to predict mortality in septic patients treated with modified EGDT. <b>Materials and Methods</b> : Secondary analysis of data from prospectively identified patients treated with modified EGDT in a large tertiary care suburban community hospital with over 85,000 ED visits annually and 700 inpatient beds, from May 2007 through May 2008. We included all patients with severe sepsis or septic shock, who were treated with our modified EGDT protocol. Our major outcome was in-hospital mortality. The performance of the scores was compared by area under the ROC curves (AUCs). <b>Results</b> : A total of 216 patients with severe sepsis or septic shock were treated with modified EGDT during the study period. Overall mortality was 32.9&#x0025;. Calculated AUCs were 0.74 [95&#x0025; confidence interval (CI): 0.67-0.81] for the MEDS score, 0.62 (95&#x0025; CI: 0.54-0.69) for the REMS, and 0.59 (95&#x0025; CI: 0.51-0.67) for the CURB-65 score. <b>Conclusion</b> : We found that all three ED-based systems for scoring severity of illness had low to moderate predictive capability. The MEDS score demonstrated the largest AUC of the studied scoring systems for the outcome of mortality, although the CIs on point estimates of the AUC of the REMS and CURB-65 scores all overlap.http://www.onlinejets.org/article.asp?issn=0974-2700;year=2010;volume=3;issue=4;spage=342;epage=347;aulast=CroweSeverity of illness indexsepsismortalityseptic shockcritical care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Crowe Colleen
Kulstad Erik
Mistry Chintan
Kulstad Christine
spellingShingle Crowe Colleen
Kulstad Erik
Mistry Chintan
Kulstad Christine
Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock
Severity of illness index
sepsis
mortality
septic shock
critical care
author_facet Crowe Colleen
Kulstad Erik
Mistry Chintan
Kulstad Christine
author_sort Crowe Colleen
title Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
title_short Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
title_full Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
title_fullStr Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
title_sort comparison of severity of illness scoring systems in the prediction of hospital mortality in severe sepsis and septic shock
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock
issn 0974-2700
0974-519X
publishDate 2010-01-01
description <b>Background</b> : New scoring systems, including the Rapid Emergency Medicine Score (REMS), the Mortality in Emergency Department Sepsis (MEDS) score, and the confusion, urea nitrogen, respiratory rate, blood pressure, 65 years and older (CURB-65) score, have been developed for emergency department (ED) use in various patient populations. Increasing use of early goal directed therapy (EGDT) for the emergent treatment of sepsis introduces a growing population of patients in which the accuracy of these scoring systems has not been widely examined. <b>Objectives</b> : To evaluate the ability of the REMS, MEDS score, and CURB-65 score to predict mortality in septic patients treated with modified EGDT. <b>Materials and Methods</b> : Secondary analysis of data from prospectively identified patients treated with modified EGDT in a large tertiary care suburban community hospital with over 85,000 ED visits annually and 700 inpatient beds, from May 2007 through May 2008. We included all patients with severe sepsis or septic shock, who were treated with our modified EGDT protocol. Our major outcome was in-hospital mortality. The performance of the scores was compared by area under the ROC curves (AUCs). <b>Results</b> : A total of 216 patients with severe sepsis or septic shock were treated with modified EGDT during the study period. Overall mortality was 32.9&#x0025;. Calculated AUCs were 0.74 [95&#x0025; confidence interval (CI): 0.67-0.81] for the MEDS score, 0.62 (95&#x0025; CI: 0.54-0.69) for the REMS, and 0.59 (95&#x0025; CI: 0.51-0.67) for the CURB-65 score. <b>Conclusion</b> : We found that all three ED-based systems for scoring severity of illness had low to moderate predictive capability. The MEDS score demonstrated the largest AUC of the studied scoring systems for the outcome of mortality, although the CIs on point estimates of the AUC of the REMS and CURB-65 scores all overlap.
topic Severity of illness index
sepsis
mortality
septic shock
critical care
url http://www.onlinejets.org/article.asp?issn=0974-2700;year=2010;volume=3;issue=4;spage=342;epage=347;aulast=Crowe
work_keys_str_mv AT crowecolleen comparisonofseverityofillnessscoringsystemsinthepredictionofhospitalmortalityinseveresepsisandsepticshock
AT kulstaderik comparisonofseverityofillnessscoringsystemsinthepredictionofhospitalmortalityinseveresepsisandsepticshock
AT mistrychintan comparisonofseverityofillnessscoringsystemsinthepredictionofhospitalmortalityinseveresepsisandsepticshock
AT kulstadchristine comparisonofseverityofillnessscoringsystemsinthepredictionofhospitalmortalityinseveresepsisandsepticshock
_version_ 1725755906251030528