Aim of this study was to develop a new simpler and more effective severity score for communityacquired pneumonia (CAP) patients. A total of 1640 consecutive hospitalized CAP patients in Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University were included. The effectiveness of different pneumonia severity scores to predict mortality was compared, and the performance of the new score was validated on an external cohort of 1164 patients with pneumonia admitted to a teaching hospital in Italy. Using age≥ 65 years, LDH>230u/L, albumin<3.5g/dL, platelet count<100×109/L, confusion, urea>7mmol/L, respiratory rate≥30/min, low blood pressure, we assembled a new severity score named as expanded-CURB-65. The 30-day mortality and length of stay were increased along with increased risk score. The AUCs in the prediction of 30-day mortality in the main cohort were 0.826 (95%CI, 0.807–0.844), 0.801 (95%CI, 0.781–0.820), 0.756 (95%CI, 0.735–0.777), 0.793 (95%CI, 0.773–0.813) and 0.759 (95%CI, 0.737–0.779) for the expanded-CURB-65, PSI, CURB-65, SMART-COP and A-DROP, respectively. The performance of this bedside score was confirmed in CAP patients of the validation cohort although calibration was not successful in patients with health care-associated pneumonia (HCAP). The expanded CURB-65 is objective, simpler and more accurate scoring system for evaluation of CAP severity, and the predictive efficiency was better than other score systems.

Liu, J.l., Xu, F., Zhou, H., Wu, X.j., Shi, L.x., Lu, R.q., et al. (2016). Expanded CURB-65: A new score system predicts severity of community-acquired pneumonia with superior efficiency. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 6, 1-7 [10.1038/srep22911].

Expanded CURB-65: A new score system predicts severity of community-acquired pneumonia with superior efficiency

FARCOMENI, Alessio;
2016-01-01

Abstract

Aim of this study was to develop a new simpler and more effective severity score for communityacquired pneumonia (CAP) patients. A total of 1640 consecutive hospitalized CAP patients in Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University were included. The effectiveness of different pneumonia severity scores to predict mortality was compared, and the performance of the new score was validated on an external cohort of 1164 patients with pneumonia admitted to a teaching hospital in Italy. Using age≥ 65 years, LDH>230u/L, albumin<3.5g/dL, platelet count<100×109/L, confusion, urea>7mmol/L, respiratory rate≥30/min, low blood pressure, we assembled a new severity score named as expanded-CURB-65. The 30-day mortality and length of stay were increased along with increased risk score. The AUCs in the prediction of 30-day mortality in the main cohort were 0.826 (95%CI, 0.807–0.844), 0.801 (95%CI, 0.781–0.820), 0.756 (95%CI, 0.735–0.777), 0.793 (95%CI, 0.773–0.813) and 0.759 (95%CI, 0.737–0.779) for the expanded-CURB-65, PSI, CURB-65, SMART-COP and A-DROP, respectively. The performance of this bedside score was confirmed in CAP patients of the validation cohort although calibration was not successful in patients with health care-associated pneumonia (HCAP). The expanded CURB-65 is objective, simpler and more accurate scoring system for evaluation of CAP severity, and the predictive efficiency was better than other score systems.
2016
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore SECS-S/01 - STATISTICA
English
multidisciplinary; pneumonia; delivery of health care; pneumonia hcap
www.nature.com/srep/index.html
Liu, J.l., Xu, F., Zhou, H., Wu, X.j., Shi, L.x., Lu, R.q., et al. (2016). Expanded CURB-65: A new score system predicts severity of community-acquired pneumonia with superior efficiency. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 6, 1-7 [10.1038/srep22911].
Liu, Jl; Xu, F; Zhou, H; Wu, Xj; Shi, Lx; Lu, Rq; Farcomeni, A; Venditti, M; Zhao, Yl; Luo, Sy; Dong, Xj; Falcone, M
Articolo su rivista
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Liu_Expanded_2016.pdf

solo utenti autorizzati

Dimensione 458.02 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
458.02 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/223771
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 25
  • Scopus 50
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 50
social impact