A simple index predicting mortality in acutely hospitalized patients

Author:

Froom P12ORCID,Shimoni Z34,Benbassat J5,Silke B6

Affiliation:

1. From the Clinical Utility Department, Sanz Medical Center, Laniado Hospital, Netanya 4244916, Israel

2. School of Public Health, University of Tel Aviv, Israel

3. Department of Internal Medicine B, Laniado Hospital, Netanya 4244916, Israel

4. Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Haifa, Israel

5. Department of Medicine (retired), Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

6. Division of Internal Medicine, St. James’ Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland

Abstract

Summary Background Mortality rates used to evaluate and improve the quality of hospital care are adjusted for comorbidity and disease severity. Comorbidity, measured by International Classification of Diseases codes, do not reflect the severity of the medical condition, that requires clinical assessments not available in electronic databases, and/or laboratory data with clinically relevant ranges to permit extrapolation from one setting to the next. Aim To propose a simple index predicting mortality in acutely hospitalized patients. Design Retrospective cohort study with internal and external validation. Methods The study populations were all acutely admitted patients in 2015–16, and in January 2019–November 2019 to internal medicine, cardiology and intensive care departments at the Laniado Hospital in Israel, and in 2002–19, at St. James Hospital, Ireland. Predictor variables were age and admission laboratory tests. The outcome variable was in-hospital mortality. Using logistic regression of the data in the 2015–16 Israeli cohort, we derived an index that included age groups and significant laboratory data. Results In the Israeli 2015–16 cohort, the index predicted mortality rates from 0.2% to 32.0% with a c-statistic (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve) of 0.86. In the Israeli 2019 validation cohort, the index predicted mortality rates from 0.3% to 38.9% with a c-statistic of 0.87. An abbreviated index performed similarly in the Irish 2002–19 cohort. Conclusions Hospital mortality can be predicted by age and selected admission laboratory data without acquiring information from the patient’s medical records. This permits an inexpensive comparison of performance of hospital departments.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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1. Hypochromic red blood cells is an independent measure of patient frailty;International Journal of Laboratory Hematology;2023-03-26

2. The Norton scale is an important predictor of in-hospital mortality in internal medicine patients;Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -);2022-12-15

3. The presence of a urinary catheter is an important predictor of in‐hospital mortality in internal medicine patients;Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice;2022-05-05

4. Parameters of the complete blood count predict in hospital mortality;International Journal of Laboratory Hematology;2021-08-31

5. Acute medical care: time is of the essence;QJM: An International Journal of Medicine;2021-05-01

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