|国家预印本平台
首页|Identification on Admission of COVID-19 Patients at Risk of Subsequent Rapid Clinical Deterioration

Identification on Admission of COVID-19 Patients at Risk of Subsequent Rapid Clinical Deterioration

Identification on Admission of COVID-19 Patients at Risk of Subsequent Rapid Clinical Deterioration

来源:medRxiv_logomedRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract IntroductionRecent localized surges in COVID-19 cases have resulted in the hospitals serving those areas being overwhelmed. In such cases, the ability to rapidly and objectively determine a patient’s acuity and predict near-term care needs is a major challenge. At issue is the clinician’s ability to correctly identify patients at risk for subsequent rapid clinical deterioration. Data-driven tools that can support such determinations in real-time may be a valuable adjunct to clinician judgement during COVID-19 surges. ObjectiveTo assess the effectiveness of the Rothman Index (RI) predictive model in distinguishing the risk of subsequent deterioration or elevated care needs among hospitalized COVID-19 patients at the time of hospital admission. MethodsWe evaluated the initial RI score on admission to predict COVID-19 patient risk for 216 COVID-19 patients discharged from March 21st to June 7th, 2020 at Sinai LifeBridge Hospital and 1,453 COVID-19 patients discharged from any of Yale New Haven Health System’s Yale New Haven, Bridgeport, and Greenwich hospitals from April 1st to April 28th, 2020. In-hospital mortality as a function of age and RI on admission for COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients were compared. AUC values using each COVID-19 patient’s initial RI on admission to predict in-hospital mortality, mechanical ventilation, and ICU utilization were computed, as were precision and recall for mortality prediction at specific RI thresholds. ResultsThe RI computed at the time of admission provides a high degree of objective discrimination to differentiate the COVID-19 population into high and low risk populations at the outset of hospitalization. The high risk segment based on initial RI constitutes 20-30% of the COVID-19 positive population with mortality rates from 40-50%. The low risk segment based on initial RI constitutes 40%-55% of the population with mortality rates ranging from 1%-8%. Of note is that COVID-19 patients who present with heightened but generally unremarkable acuity can be identified early as having considerably elevated risk for subsequent physiological deterioration. ConclusionCOVID-19 patients exhibit elevated mortality rates compared to non-COVID-19 medical service patients and may be subject to rapid deterioration following hospital admission. A lack of predictive indicators for identifying patients at high risk of subsequent deterioration or death can pose a challenge to clinicians. The RI has excellent performance characteristics when stratifying risk among COVID-19 patients at the time of admission. The RI can assist clinicians in real-time with a high degree of objective discrimination by segmenting the COVID-19 population into high and low risk populations. This supports rapid and optimal patient bed assignment and resource allocation.

Barnes J.、Durand D.、Hoq M.、Amin A.、Rothman M.J.、Beals J.、Belk K.、Rimar J.、Donohue T.

Sinai LifeBridge HospitalSinai LifeBridge HospitalYale New Haven Health, Bridgeport HospitalUniversity of California Irvine Medical CenterPeraHealth Inc.PeraHealth Inc.PeraHealth Inc.Yale New Haven Health, Yale New Haven HospitalYale New Haven Health, Yale New Haven Hospital

10.1101/2020.08.13.20171751

临床医学内科学医学研究方法

Barnes J.,Durand D.,Hoq M.,Amin A.,Rothman M.J.,Beals J.,Belk K.,Rimar J.,Donohue T..Identification on Admission of COVID-19 Patients at Risk of Subsequent Rapid Clinical Deterioration[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-07-16].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.08.13.20171751.点此复制

评论