| Literature DB >> 30253229 |
Oliver C Redfern1, Marco A F Pimentel2, David Prytherch1, Paul Meredith3, David A Clifton4, Lionel Tarassenko4, Gary B Smith5, Peter J Watkinson6.
Abstract
AIM: The National Early Warning System (NEWS) is based on vital signs; the Laboratory Decision Tree Early Warning Score (LDT-EWS) on laboratory test results. We aimed to develop and validate a new EWS (the LDTEWS:NEWS risk index) by combining the two and evaluating the discrimination of the primary outcome of unanticipated intensive care unit (ICU) admission or in-hospital mortality, within 24 h.Entities:
Keywords: Early warning score; Laboratory test results; Physiological monitoring; Vital signs
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30253229 PMCID: PMC6562198 DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.09.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Resuscitation ISSN: 0300-9572 Impact factor: 5.262
NEWS and LDTEWS (for both males and females) cut-offs and weightings.
Fig. 1Diagram showing construction of development and validation sets in Portsmouth and Oxford.
Demographics of admissions for development and validation cohorts.
| Portsmouth | Portsmouth | Oxford | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dates | 01/2011–12/2015 | 01/2016–12/2016 | 01/2016–12/2016 |
| Admissions, n | 97,933 | 21,028 | 16,309 |
| Complete vital signs sets, n | 2,490,529 | 660,621 | 395,404 |
| Unique laboratory results, n | 458,397 | 110,074 | 62,089 |
| Mortality, n (%) | 4723 (4.8%) | 1031 (4.9%) | 721 (4.4%) |
| ICU admissions, n (%) | 1078 (1.1%) | 216 (1.0%) | 159 (1%) |
| Males, n (%) | 48,189 (49.2%) | 10,366 (49.3%) | 8124 (49.8%) |
| Age, | 73 (57–83) | 74 (59–84) | 73 (58–84) |
| Charlson co-morbidity index, | 4 (0–13) | 4 (0–13) | 4 (0–14) |
| Length of stay (days), | 3.7 (1.5–8.8) | 4.0 (1.8–10.2) | 3.5 (1.4–8.2) |
The Charlson Comorbidity Index was determined according to the methodology and specification provided by NHS Digital (available at https://beta.digital.nhs.uk/publications/ci-hub/summary-hospital-level-mortality-indicator-shmi).
Fig. 2ROC curves showing the performance of NEWS, LDTEWS and the new combined score to predict observation sets followed by in-hospital death or unanticipated admission to ICU in the following 24 h.