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Comparison of the prognostic performance of the CURB-65 and a modified version of the pneumonia severity index designed to identify high-risk patients using the International Community-Acquired Pneumonia Collaboration Cohort. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare a modified version of the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI-HR) which identifies high-risk pneumonia patients, against the CURB-65 prediction rule, traditionally used for assessing pneumonia severity and mortality risk.
  • The research analyzed data from 6 pneumonia patient groups and found that PSI-HR successfully identified low-risk patients with a lower mortality rate (1.6%) compared to CURB-65 (2.2%), while high-risk patients showed a higher mortality rate with PSI-HR (36.5%) versus CURB-65 (32.2%).
  • PSI-HR demonstrated better overall accuracy (AUROC of 0.82) in predicting short-term mortality than CURB-65 (AUROC

Article Abstract

Background: Although the PSI and CURB-65 represent well-validated prediction rules for pneumonia prognosis, PSI was designed to identify patients at low risk and CURB- 65 patients at high risk of mortality. We compared the prognostic performance of a modified version of the PSI designed to identify high-risk patients (i.e., PSI-HR) to CURB-65 in predicting short-term mortality.

Methods: Using data from 6 pneumonia cohorts, we designed PSI-HR as a 6-class prediction rule using the original prognostic weights of all PSI variables and modifying the risk score thresholds to define risk classes. We calculated the proportion of low-risk and high-risk patients using CURB-65 and PSI-HR and 30-day mortality in these subgroups. We compared the rules' sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values for mortality at all risk class thresholds and assessed discriminatory power using areas under their receiver operating characteristic curves (AUROCs).

Results: Among 13,874 patients with pneumonia, 1,036 (7.5%) died. For PSI-HR versus CURB-65, aggregate mortality was lower in low-risk patients (1.6% vs. 2.2%, p = 0.005) and higher in high-risk patients (36.5% vs. 32.2%, p = 0.27). PSI-HR had higher sensitivities than CURB-65 at all thresholds; PSI-HR also had higher specificities at the 3 lowest thresholds and specificities within 0.5% points of CURB-65 at the 2 highest thresholds. The AUROC was larger for PSI-HR than CURB- 65 (0.82 vs. 0.77, p < 0.0001).

Conclusions: PSI-HR demonstrated superior prognostic accuracy to CURB-65 at the lower end of the severity spectrum and identified high-risk patients with nonsignificant higher short-term mortality at the higher end.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2022.106884DOI Listing

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