Literature DB >> 25565487

Risk factors and screening instruments to predict adverse outcomes for undifferentiated older emergency department patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Christopher R Carpenter1, Erica Shelton, Susan Fowler, Brian Suffoletto, Timothy F Platts-Mills, Richard E Rothman, Teresita M Hogan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: A significant proportion of geriatric patients experience suboptimal outcomes following episodes of emergency department (ED) care. Risk stratification screening instruments exist to distinguish vulnerable subsets, but their prognostic accuracy varies. This systematic review quantifies the prognostic accuracy of individual risk factors and ED-validated screening instruments to distinguish patients more or less likely to experience short-term adverse outcomes like unanticipated ED returns, hospital readmissions, functional decline, or death.
METHODS: A medical librarian and two emergency physicians conducted a medical literature search of PubMed, EMBASE, SCOPUS, CENTRAL, and ClinicalTrials.gov using numerous combinations of search terms, including emergency medical services, risk stratification, geriatric, and multiple related MeSH terms in hundreds of combinations. Two authors hand-searched relevant specialty society research abstracts. Two physicians independently reviewed all abstracts and used the revised Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies instrument to assess individual study quality. When two or more qualitatively similar studies were identified, meta-analysis was conducted using Meta-DiSc software. Primary outcomes were sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio (LR+), and negative likelihood ratio (LR-) for predictors of adverse outcomes at 1 to 12 months after the ED encounters. A hypothetical test-treatment threshold analysis was constructed based on the meta-analytic summary estimate of prognostic accuracy for one outcome.
RESULTS: A total of 7,940 unique citations were identified yielding 34 studies for inclusion in this systematic review. Studies were significantly heterogeneous in terms of country, outcomes assessed, and the timing of post-ED outcome assessments. All studies occurred in ED settings and none used published clinical decision rule derivation methodology. Individual risk factors assessed included dementia, delirium, age, dependency, malnutrition, pressure sore risk, and self-rated health. None of these risk factors significantly increased the risk of adverse outcome (LR+ range = 0.78 to 2.84). The absence of dependency reduces the risk of 1-year mortality (LR- = 0.27) and nursing home placement (LR- = 0.27). Five constructs of frailty were evaluated, but none increased or decreased the risk of adverse outcome. Three instruments were evaluated in the meta-analysis: Identification of Seniors at Risk, Triage Risk Screening Tool, and Variables Indicative of Placement Risk. None of these instruments significantly increased (LR+ range for various outcomes = 0.98 to 1.40) or decreased (LR- range = 0.53 to 1.11) the risk of adverse outcomes. The test threshold for 3-month functional decline based on the most accurate instrument was 42%, and the treatment threshold was 61%.
CONCLUSIONS: Risk stratification of geriatric adults following ED care is limited by the lack of pragmatic, accurate, and reliable instruments. Although absence of dependency reduces the risk of 1-year mortality, no individual risk factor, frailty construct, or risk assessment instrument accurately predicts risk of adverse outcomes in older ED patients. Existing instruments designed to risk stratify older ED patients do not accurately distinguish high- or low-risk subsets. Clinicians, educators, and policy-makers should not use these instruments as valid predictors of post-ED adverse outcomes. Future research to derive and validate feasible ED instruments to distinguish vulnerable elders should employ published decision instrument methods and examine the contributions of alternative variables, such as health literacy and dementia, which often remain clinically occult.
© 2014 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25565487     DOI: 10.1111/acem.12569

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  63 in total

1.  Is self-rated health an independent prognostic factor of six-week mortality in older patients hospitalized for an acute condition?

Authors:  Claire Godard-Sebillotte; Moustapha Dramé; Tatiana Basileu; Jean-Luc Fanon; Lidvine Godaert
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2016-02-26       Impact factor: 4.147

2.  Head Trauma from Falling Increases Subsequent Emergency Department Visits More Than Other Fall-Related Injuries in Older Adults.

Authors:  Lauren T Southerland; Julie A Stephens; Shari Robinson; James Falk; Laura Phieffer; Joseph A Rosenthal; Jeffrey M Caterino
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 5.562

3.  Emergency Department Visits Without Hospitalization Are Associated With Functional Decline in Older Persons.

Authors:  Justine M Nagurney; William Fleischman; Ling Han; Linda Leo-Summers; Heather G Allore; Thomas M Gill
Journal:  Ann Emerg Med       Date:  2017-01-06       Impact factor: 5.721

Review 4.  [Acute and emergency care of geriatric patients : Old ways - new paths].

Authors:  Katrin Singler; Hans Jürgen Heppner
Journal:  Z Gerontol Geriatr       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 1.281

5.  Frailty assessment in the ICU: translation to 'real-world' clinical practice.

Authors:  J R Falvey; L E Ferrante
Journal:  Anaesthesia       Date:  2019-03-11       Impact factor: 6.955

6.  The prognostic signature of health-related quality of life in older patients admitted to the emergency department: a 6-month follow-up study.

Authors:  Volker Burst; Maria Cristina Polidori; Marcel Pascal Rarek; Anna Maria Meyer; Lena Pickert; Alberto Pilotto; Thomas Benzing
Journal:  Aging Clin Exp Res       Date:  2020-11-01       Impact factor: 3.636

7.  Concepts in Practice: Geriatric Emergency Departments.

Authors:  Lauren T Southerland; Alexander X Lo; Kevin Biese; Glenn Arendts; Jay Banerjee; Ula Hwang; Scott Dresden; Vivian Argento; Maura Kennedy; Christina L Shenvi; Christopher R Carpenter
Journal:  Ann Emerg Med       Date:  2019-11-13       Impact factor: 5.721

8.  Self-rated health as a predictor of mid-term and long-term mortality in older Afro-Caribbeans hospitalised via the emergency department.

Authors:  Lidvine Godaert; C Godard-Sebillotte; L Allard Saint-Albin; L Bousquet; I Bourdel-Marchasson; J-L Fanon; M Dramé
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 4.147

9.  Health-related quality of life at hospital discharge as a predictor for 6-month unplanned readmission and all-cause mortality of acutely admitted older medical patients.

Authors:  Jane Andreasen; Robbert J J Gobbens; Helle Højmark Eriksen; Kim Overvad
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2019-08-03       Impact factor: 4.147

Review 10.  [Triage, screening, and assessment of geriatric patients in the emergency department].

Authors:  M Groening; P Wilke
Journal:  Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed       Date:  2019-12-02       Impact factor: 0.840

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