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Risk stratification of patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 using the ISARIC WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol: development and validation of the 4C Mortality Score.

Risk stratification of patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 using the ISARIC WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol: development and validation of the 4C Mortality Score.
Risk stratification of patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 using the ISARIC WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol: development and validation of the 4C Mortality Score.
Objective To develop and validate a pragmatic risk score to predict mortality in patients admitted to hospital with coronavirus disease 2019 (covid-19).

Design Prospective observational cohort study.

Setting International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infections Consortium (ISARIC) World Health Organization (WHO) Clinical Characterisation Protocol UK (CCP-UK) study (performed by the ISARIC Coronavirus Clinical Characterisation Consortium—ISARIC-4C) in 260 hospitals across England, Scotland, and Wales. Model training was performed on a cohort of patients recruited between 6 February and 20 May 2020, with validation conducted on a second cohort of patients recruited after model development between 21 May and 29 June 2020.

Participants Adults (age ≥18 years) admitted to hospital with covid-19 at least four weeks before final data extraction.

Main outcome measure In-hospital mortality.

Results 35 463 patients were included in the derivation dataset (mortality rate 32.2%) and 22 361 in the validation dataset (mortality rate 30.1%). The final 4C Mortality Score included eight variables readily available at initial hospital assessment: age, sex, number of comorbidities, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation, level of consciousness, urea level, and C reactive protein (score range 0-21 points). The 4C Score showed high discrimination for mortality (derivation cohort: area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.78 to 0.79; validation cohort: 0.77, 0.76 to 0.77) with excellent calibration (validation: calibration-in-the-large=0, slope=1.0). Patients with a score of at least 15 (n=4158, 19%) had a 62% mortality (positive predictive value 62%) compared with 1% mortality for those with a score of 3 or less (n=1650, 7%; negative predictive value 99%). Discriminatory performance was higher than 15 pre-existing risk stratification scores (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve range 0.61-0.76), with scores developed in other covid-19 cohorts often performing poorly (range 0.63-0.73).

Conclusions An easy-to-use risk stratification score has been developed and validated based on commonly available parameters at hospital presentation. The 4C Mortality Score outperformed existing scores, showed utility to directly inform clinical decision making, and can be used to stratify patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 into different management groups. The score should be further validated to determine its applicability in other populations.

Study registration ISRCTN66726260
0959-8138
Knight, SR
7cb81ed4-5282-4ae1-915f-7ed0f17c1648
Ho, A
b64267d3-f3d2-4bdc-9803-5c93be4fa90c
Pius, R
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Buchan, I
2862c556-9b42-4ad6-8932-5e22a898a062
Carson, G
56178b9a-2f1e-4823-b6d0-0ee1b2eef830
Drake, TM
059a4d12-8b2d-449a-87d6-f59e00786557
Dunning, J
60d7d811-eeaa-434f-b3c7-bcb08fd1715e
Fairfield, CJ
17091fca-beba-417a-874a-a25a78959302
Gamble, C
df18d507-c47a-4b85-8ad5-20319b02bbd9
Green, CA
1a5e811c-d35e-49e8-aff9-9086f1203e6f
Gupta, R
619ee4fe-3929-46b6-911e-d42188b490f5
Halpin, S
22481154-e349-46d5-a754-2a86bd224be2
Hardwick, HE
5f11e28f-495e-43ff-bf3c-7388f0619684
Holden, KA
ec5c9047-c8a7-4b23-ad41-52c8424e250b
Dushianthan, Ahilanandan
013692a2-cf26-4278-80bd-9d8fcdb17751
Knight, SR
7cb81ed4-5282-4ae1-915f-7ed0f17c1648
Ho, A
b64267d3-f3d2-4bdc-9803-5c93be4fa90c
Pius, R
7d1b224a-f607-425f-b2e0-a39a60c7feab
Buchan, I
2862c556-9b42-4ad6-8932-5e22a898a062
Carson, G
56178b9a-2f1e-4823-b6d0-0ee1b2eef830
Drake, TM
059a4d12-8b2d-449a-87d6-f59e00786557
Dunning, J
60d7d811-eeaa-434f-b3c7-bcb08fd1715e
Fairfield, CJ
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Gamble, C
df18d507-c47a-4b85-8ad5-20319b02bbd9
Green, CA
1a5e811c-d35e-49e8-aff9-9086f1203e6f
Gupta, R
619ee4fe-3929-46b6-911e-d42188b490f5
Halpin, S
22481154-e349-46d5-a754-2a86bd224be2
Hardwick, HE
5f11e28f-495e-43ff-bf3c-7388f0619684
Holden, KA
ec5c9047-c8a7-4b23-ad41-52c8424e250b
Dushianthan, Ahilanandan
013692a2-cf26-4278-80bd-9d8fcdb17751

Knight, SR, Ho, A, Pius, R, Buchan, I, Carson, G, Drake, TM, Dunning, J, Fairfield, CJ, Gamble, C, Green, CA, Gupta, R, Halpin, S, Hardwick, HE, Holden, KA and Dushianthan, Ahilanandan (2020) Risk stratification of patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 using the ISARIC WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol: development and validation of the 4C Mortality Score. BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 370, [m3339]. (doi:10.1136/bmj.m3339).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective To develop and validate a pragmatic risk score to predict mortality in patients admitted to hospital with coronavirus disease 2019 (covid-19).

Design Prospective observational cohort study.

Setting International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infections Consortium (ISARIC) World Health Organization (WHO) Clinical Characterisation Protocol UK (CCP-UK) study (performed by the ISARIC Coronavirus Clinical Characterisation Consortium—ISARIC-4C) in 260 hospitals across England, Scotland, and Wales. Model training was performed on a cohort of patients recruited between 6 February and 20 May 2020, with validation conducted on a second cohort of patients recruited after model development between 21 May and 29 June 2020.

Participants Adults (age ≥18 years) admitted to hospital with covid-19 at least four weeks before final data extraction.

Main outcome measure In-hospital mortality.

Results 35 463 patients were included in the derivation dataset (mortality rate 32.2%) and 22 361 in the validation dataset (mortality rate 30.1%). The final 4C Mortality Score included eight variables readily available at initial hospital assessment: age, sex, number of comorbidities, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation, level of consciousness, urea level, and C reactive protein (score range 0-21 points). The 4C Score showed high discrimination for mortality (derivation cohort: area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.78 to 0.79; validation cohort: 0.77, 0.76 to 0.77) with excellent calibration (validation: calibration-in-the-large=0, slope=1.0). Patients with a score of at least 15 (n=4158, 19%) had a 62% mortality (positive predictive value 62%) compared with 1% mortality for those with a score of 3 or less (n=1650, 7%; negative predictive value 99%). Discriminatory performance was higher than 15 pre-existing risk stratification scores (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve range 0.61-0.76), with scores developed in other covid-19 cohorts often performing poorly (range 0.63-0.73).

Conclusions An easy-to-use risk stratification score has been developed and validated based on commonly available parameters at hospital presentation. The 4C Mortality Score outperformed existing scores, showed utility to directly inform clinical decision making, and can be used to stratify patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 into different management groups. The score should be further validated to determine its applicability in other populations.

Study registration ISRCTN66726260

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More information

Published date: September 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494583
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494583
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: 76a9e0f9-85a4-4908-b954-e31250c7b05e
ORCID for Ahilanandan Dushianthan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0165-3359

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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2024 16:50
Last modified: 11 Oct 2024 01:55

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Contributors

Author: SR Knight
Author: A Ho
Author: R Pius
Author: I Buchan
Author: G Carson
Author: TM Drake
Author: J Dunning
Author: CJ Fairfield
Author: C Gamble
Author: CA Green
Author: R Gupta
Author: S Halpin
Author: HE Hardwick
Author: KA Holden
Author: Ahilanandan Dushianthan ORCID iD

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