Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Predictive validity of the CriSTAL tool for short-term mortality in older people presenting at Emergency Departments: a prospective study

2018; Elsevier BV; Volume: 9; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/s41999-018-0123-6

ISSN

1878-7657

Autores

Magnolia Cardona, Ebony Lewis, Mette Rahbek Kristensen, Helene Skjøt‐Arkil, Anette Ekmann, Hanne Nygaard, Jonas Junghans Jensen, Rune Overgaard Jensen, Jonas L. Pedersen, Robin Turner, Frances L. Garden, Hatem Alkhouri, Stephen Asha, John D. MacKenzie, Margaret Perkins, Sam Suri, Anna Holdgate, Luis Winoto, David C. Chang, Blanca Gallego‐Luxan, Sally McCarthy, John Asger Petersen, Birgitte Nybo Jensen, Christian Backer Mogensen, Ken Hillman, Mikkel Brabrand,

Tópico(s)

Emergency and Acute Care Studies

Resumo

To determine the validity of the Australian clinical prediction tool Criteria for Screening and Triaging to Appropriate aLternative care (CRISTAL) based on objective clinical criteria to accurately identify risk of death within 3 months of admission among older patients. Prospective study of ≥ 65 year-olds presenting at emergency departments in five Australian (Aus) and four Danish (DK) hospitals. Logistic regression analysis was used to model factors for death prediction; Sensitivity, specificity, area under the ROC curve and calibration with bootstrapping techniques were used to describe predictive accuracy. 2493 patients, with median age 78–80 years (DK–Aus). The deceased had significantly higher mean CriSTAL with Australian mean of 8.1 (95% CI 7.7–8.6 vs. 5.8 95% CI 5.6–5.9) and Danish mean 7.1 (95% CI 6.6–7.5 vs. 5.5 95% CI 5.4–5.6). The model with Fried Frailty score was optimal for the Australian cohort but prediction with the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) was also good (AUROC 0.825 and 0.81, respectively). Values for the Danish cohort were AUROC 0.764 with Fried and 0.794 using CFS. The most significant independent predictors of short-term death in both cohorts were advanced malignancy, frailty, male gender and advanced age. CriSTAL's accuracy was only modest for in-hospital death prediction in either setting. The modified CriSTAL tool (with CFS instead of Fried's frailty instrument) has good discriminant power to improve prognostic certainty of short-term mortality for ED physicians in both health systems. This shows promise in enhancing clinician's confidence in initiating earlier end-of-life discussions.

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