Objectives: The aim of the study was to provide evidence for, at which vital and laboratory values, increased risk of 7-day mortality in acute adult patients on arrival to an emergency department (ED).

Design: A population-based cohort study.

Setting: ED at Odense University Hospital, Denmark.

Participants: All patients ≥18 years with a first-time contact within the study period, 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2015.

Primary And Secondary Outcome Measures: Primary outcome was 7-day all-cause mortality.Variables were first recorded vital and laboratory values included in risk stratification scores; respiratory frequency, blood pressure, heart rate, Glasgow Coma Scale, temperature, saturation, creatinine, PaO, platelet count and bilirubin. The association between values and mortality was described using a restricted cubic spline. A predefined 7-day mortality of 2.5% was chosen as a relevant threshold.

Results: We included 40 423 patients, 52.5% women, median age 57 (IQR 38-74) years and 7-day mortality 2.8%. Seven-day mortality of 2.5% had thresholds of respiratory frequency <12 and >18/min, systolic blood pressure <112 and >192 mm Hg, heart rate <54 and >102 beats/min, temperature <36.0°C and >39.8°C, saturation <97%, Glasgow Coma Scale score <15, creatinine <41 and >98 µmol/L for PaO <9.9 and >12.3 kPa, platelet count <165 and >327×10/L and bilirubin >12 µmol/L.

Conclusion: Vital values on arrival, outside the normal ranges for the measures, are indicative of increased risk of short-term mortality, and most of the value thresholds are included in the lowest urgency level in triage and risk stratification scoring systems.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7674080PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038516DOI Listing

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