Validation of the NULL‐EASE Score for Predicting Survival in a Multiethnic Asian Cohort of Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Author:

Lim Shir Lynn123ORCID,Chan Siew Pang24ORCID,Shahidah Nur5ORCID,Woo Kai Lee1ORCID,Lam Sean Shao Wei6ORCID,Leong Benjamin Sieu‐Hon7ORCID,Lip Gregory Y. H.89ORCID,Ong Marcus Eng Hock510ORCID,Chia Michael Y. C.,Ng Yih Yng,Gan Han Nee,Tiah Ling,Ng Wei Ming,Tay Wei Ling,Cheah Si Oon,Mao Desmond R.,Edwin Nausheen,Low Shun Yee

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology National University Heart Centre Singapore

2. Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine National University of Singapore Singapore

3. Pre‐hospital and Emergency Research Centre Duke‐NUS Medical School Singapore

4. Cardiovascular Research Institute National University Heart Centre Singapore

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Singapore General Hospital Singapore

6. Health Services Research Centre Singapore Health Services Singapore

7. Emergency Department National University Hospital Singapore

8. Liverpool Centre for Cardiovascular Science at University of Liverpool Liverpool John Moores University and Liverpool Heart & Chest Hospital Liverpool United Kingdom

9. Department of Clinical Medicine, Danish Center for Health Services Research Aalborg University Aalborg Denmark

10. Health Services and Systems Research Duke‐NUS Medical School Singapore

Abstract

Background NULL‐PLEASE is a simple and accurate clinical scoring system developed in a Western cohort of patients with out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). The need for blood test results limits its use in early stages of care. We adapted and validated the NULL‐EASE score (without laboratory tests) in an independent, multiethnic Asian cohort of patients with out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest. Methods and Results Using the Singapore OHCA registry, we included consecutive adult patients with out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest who survived to hospital admission between April 2010 to December 2020. In‐hospital mortality was the primary outcome. Logistic regression analyses were performed with STATA MP v18. Of 3274 patients (median age 64, interquartile range 54–75; 67.9% male) included in the study, 2476 (75.6%) had in‐hospital mortality. NULL‐EASE score was significantly lower in survivors compared with nonsurvivors (median [inter quartile range] 3 [1–4] versus 6 [4–7]; P <0.001) and strongly predictive of mortality (area under receiver operating characteristic, 0.81 [95% CI, 0.79–0.83]). Patients with a score of ≥3 had higher odds of mortality (adjusted odds ratio, 8.11 [95% CI, 6.57–10.00]) when compared with those with lower scores, after adjusting for sex, residential arrest, diabetes, respiratory disease, and stroke. A cutoff value of ≥3 predicted mortality with 92.2% sensitivity, 84.1% positive predictive value, 46.1% specificity, and 65.5% negative predictive value. NULL‐EASE score performed better in younger compared with older patients (area under receiver operating characteristic, 0.82 versus 0.77, P =0.008). Conclusions The NULL‐EASE score has good discriminative performance (sensitivity and accuracy) in our multiethnic Asian cohort, but the cutoff of ≥3 falls short of the desired level of specificity for therapeutic decision‐making.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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