Literature DB >> 29183435

Determining need for hospitalisation: Evaluation of the utility of the CRB-65 score in patients with community-acquired pneumonia presenting to an emergency department.

Dalton Mulombe Kabundji1, Alfred Musekiwa, Murimisi Mukansi, Charles Feldman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The CRB-65 severity of illness score, used for assessing patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), may be of particular benefit in resource-constrained areas, since it relies purely on clinical parameters.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the potential accuracy of the CRB-65 score when used in deciding whether to hospitalise patients with CAP presenting to an emergency department (ED).
METHODS: Prospective, observational study in an academic hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. Data from adult patients with radiologically confirmed CAP were analysed.
RESULTS: Overall, 152 patients were enrolled (79 females, 73 males; median age 36.5 years). Several diverse criteria had been used by the ED doctors in admission decisions, while the CRB-65 score had been used in only 3/152 patients (1.6%). Overall, 68/152 patients (44.7%) had been managed as inpatients and 84/152 (55.3%) as outpatients. If the CRB-65 had been used as the sole criterion for site-of-care decisions, 107/152 patients (70.4%) would potentially have been managed as outpatients and 45/152 (29.6%) as inpatients. Achieving a stable clinical condition took longer (p=0.037) and mortality was higher (p<0.001) in patients with higher than lower CRB-65 scores. All five patients who died were inpatients. Of these, three (60.0%) would have been classified by the CRB-65 as having an intermediate mortality risk and two (40.0%) as having a high mortality risk.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the utility of the CRB-65 score in accurately determining the need for admission of patients with CAP presenting to an ED in a resource-constrained environment.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 29183435     DOI: 10.7196/samj.8150

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  S Afr Med J


  4 in total

Review 1.  Meta-analysis of Calibration, Discrimination, and Stratum-Specific Likelihood Ratios for the CRB-65 Score.

Authors:  Mark H Ebell; Mary E Walsh; Tom Fahey; Maggie Kearney; Christian Marchello
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2019-04-16       Impact factor: 5.128

2.  The Role of Pneumococcal Pneumonia among Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Adult Turkish Population: TurkCAP Study.

Authors:  Esin Şenol; Aykut Çilli; Hakan Günen; Alper Şener; Rıdvan Dumlu; Ayşe Ödemiş; Ayşe Füsun Topçu; Yeşim Yıldız; Rahmet Güner; Ayhan Özhasenekler; Birsen Mutlu; Nurdan Köktürk; Nurgül Sevimli; Nurcan Baykam; Derya Yapar; Selami Ekin; Mehmet Polatlı; Şebnem Eren Gök; Oğuz Kılınç; Abdullah Sayıner; Ömer Karaşahin; Çağlar Çuhadaroğlu; Ayşe Sesin Kocagöz; Turhan Togan; Hüseyin Arpağ; Hakan Katı; İftihar Köksal; Firdevs Aksoy; Canan Hasanoğlu
Journal:  Turk Thorac J       Date:  2021-07

3.  Management Of Community-Acquired Pneumonia: An Observational Study In UK Primary Care.

Authors:  Naomi Launders; Dermot Ryan; Christopher C Winchester; Derek Skinner; Priyanka Raju Konduru; David B Price
Journal:  Pragmat Obs Res       Date:  2019-09-23

4.  Prospective Observational Multisite Study of Handover in the Emergency Department: Theory versus Practice.

Authors:  Philipp Ehlers; Matthias Seidel; Sylvia Schacher; Martin Pin; Rolf Fimmers; Monika Kogej; Ingo Gräff
Journal:  West J Emerg Med       Date:  2021-01-12
  4 in total

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