Derivation and Validation of a Novel Severity Scoring System for Pneumonia at Intensive Care Unit Admission

Author:

Carmo Thomas A12,Ferreira Isabella B3,Menezes Rodrigo C4,Telles Gabriel P5,Otero Matheus L1,Arriaga Maria B267,Fukutani Kiyoshi F26,Neto Licurgo P8,Agareno Sydney8,Filgueiras Filho Nivaldo M139,Andrade Bruno B12567,Akrami Kevan M6710

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Salvador, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

2. Multinational Organization Network Sponsoring Translational and Epidemiological Research Initiative, Fundação José Silveira, Salvador, Brazil

3. Universidade do Estado da Bahia, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

4. União Metropolitana para o Desenvolvimento da Educação e Cultura, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

5. Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

6. Instituto Gonçalo Moniz, Fiocruz, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

7. Faculdade de Medicina da Bahia, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Salvador, Brazil

8. Hospital de Cidade, Intensive Care Unit, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

9. Hospital de Cidade, Núcleo de Ensino e Pesquisa e Comunicação, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

10. Divisions of Infectious Diseases and Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Severity stratification scores developed in intensive care units (ICUs) are used in interventional studies to identify the most critically ill. Studies that evaluate accuracy of these scores in ICU patients admitted with pneumonia are lacking. This study aims to determine performance of severity scores as predictors of mortality in critically ill patients admitted with pneumonia. Methods Prospective cohort study in a general ICU in Brazil. ICU severity scores (Simplified Acute Physiology Score 3 [SAPS 3] and Sepsis-Related Organ Failure Assessment [qSOFA]), prognostic scores of pneumonia (CURB-65 [confusion, urea, respiratory rate, blood pressure, age] and CRB-65 [confusion, respiratory rate, blood pressure, age]), and clinical and epidemiological variables in the first 6 hours of hospitalization were analyzed. Results Two hundred patients were included between 2015 and 2018, with a median age of 81 years (interquartile range, 67–90 years) and female predominance (52%), primarily admitted from the emergency department (65%) with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP, 80.5%). SAPS 3, CURB-65, CRB-65,and qSOFA all exhibited poor performance in predicting mortality. Multivariate regression identified variables independently associated with mortality that were used to develop a novel pneumonia-specific ICU severity score (Pneumonia Shock score) that outperformed SAPS 3, CURB-65, and CRB-65. The Shock score was validated in an external multicenter cohort of critically ill patients admitted with CAP. Conclusions We created a parsimonious score that accurately identifies patients with pneumonia at highest risk of ICU death. These findings are critical to accurately stratify patients with severe pneumonia in therapeutic trials that aim to reduce mortality.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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