Establishment of a novel scoring model for mortality risk prediction in HIV-infected patients with cryptococcal meningitis

Author:

Zhao Ting,Xu Xiao-Lei,Nie Jing-Min,Chen Xiao-Hong,Jiang Zhong-Sheng,Liu Shui-Qing,Yang Tong-Tong,Yang Xuan,Sun Feng,Lu Yan-Qiu,Harypursat Vijay,Chen Yao-KaiORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) remains a leading cause of death in HIV-infected patients, despite advances in CM diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. This study was performed with the aim to develop and validate a novel scoring model to predict mortality risk in HIV-infected patients with CM (HIV/CM). Methods Data on HIV/CM inpatients were obtained from a Multicenter Cohort study in China. Independent risk factors associated with mortality were identified based on data from 2013 to 2017, and a novel scoring model for mortality risk prediction was established. The bootstrapping statistical method was used for internal validation. External validation was performed using data from 2018 to 2020. Results We found that six predictors, including age, stiff neck, impaired consciousness, intracranial pressure, CD4+ T-cell count, and urea levels, were associated with poor prognosis in HIV/CM patients. The novel scoring model could effectively identify HIV/CM patients at high risk of death on admission (area under curve 0.876; p<0.001). When the cut-off value of 5.5 points or more was applied, the sensitivity and specificity was 74.1 and 83.8%, respectively. Our scoring model showed a good discriminatory ability, with an area under the curve of 0.879 for internal validation via bootstrapping, and an area under the curve of 0.886 for external validation. Conclusions Our developed scoring model of six variables is simple, convenient, and accurate for screening high-risk patients with HIV/CM, which may be a useful tool for physicians to assess prognosis in HIV/CM inpatients.

Funder

the National Science and Technology Major Project of China During the 13th Five-year Plan Period

the Capacity Improvement Plan Project of Units appointed by the Chongqing Municipal Health Commission

Youth Scientific Research and Innovation Fund Project of Chongqing Public Health Medical Center

the Joint Medical Research Project of Chongqing Municipal Science and Technology Bureau and Chongqing Municipal Health Commission

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases

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