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Development and Validation of a 30-Day In-hospital Mortality Model Among Seriously Ill Transferred Patients: a Retrospective Cohort Study.

Mahendraker N, Flanagan M, Azar J, Williams LS. Development and Validation of a 30-Day In-hospital Mortality Model Among Seriously Ill Transferred Patients: a Retrospective Cohort Study. Journal of general internal medicine. 2021 Aug 1; 36(8):2244-2250.

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Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Predicting the risk of in-hospital mortality on admission is challenging but essential for risk stratification of patient outcomes and designing an appropriate plan-of-care, especially among transferred patients. OBJECTIVE: Develop a model that uses administrative and clinical data within 24 h of transfer to predict 30-day in-hospital mortality at an Academic Health Center (AHC). DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. We used 30 putative variables in a multiple logistic regression model in the full data set (n? = 10,389) to identify 20 candidate variables obtained from the electronic medical record (EMR) within 24 h of admission that were associated with 30-day in-hospital mortality (p? < 0.05). These 20 variables were tested using multiple logistic regression and area under the curve (AUC)-receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis to identify an optimal risk threshold score in a randomly split derivation sample (n? = 5194) which was then examined in the validation sample (n? = 5195). PARTICIPANTS: Ten thousand three hundred eighty-nine patients greater than 18 years transferred to the Indiana University (IU)-Adult Academic Health Center (AHC) between 1/1/2016 and 12/31/2017. MAIN MEASURES: Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, C-statistic, and risk threshold score of the model. KEY RESULTS: The final model was strongly discriminative (C-statistic? = 0.90) and had a good fit (Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test [X (8) = 6.26, p? = 0.62]). The positive predictive value for 30-day in-hospital death was 68%; AUC-ROC was 0.90 (95% confidence interval 0.89-0.92, p? < 0.0001). We identified a risk threshold score of -2.19 that had a maximum sensitivity (79.87%) and specificity (85.24%) in the derivation and validation sample (sensitivity: 75.00%, specificity: 85.71%). In the validation sample, 34.40% (354/1029) of the patients above this threshold died compared to only 2.83% (118/4166) deaths below this threshold. CONCLUSION: This model can use EMR and administrative data within 24 h of transfer to predict the risk of 30-day in-hospital mortality with reasonable accuracy among seriously ill transferred patients.





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