Prehospital early warning scores for adults with suspected sepsis: the PHEWS observational cohort and decision-analytic modelling study

被引:1
|
作者
Goodacre, Steve [1 ,2 ]
Sutton, Laura [1 ]
Ennis, Kate [1 ]
Thomas, Ben [1 ]
Hawksworth, Olivia [1 ]
Iftikhar, Khurram [2 ]
Croft, Susan J. [2 ]
Fuller, Gordon [2 ]
Waterhouse, Simon [1 ]
Hind, Daniel [1 ]
Stevenson, Matt [1 ]
Bradburn, Mike J. [1 ]
Smyth, Michael [3 ]
Perkins, Gavin D. [3 ]
Millins, Mark [4 ]
Rosser, Andy [5 ]
Dickson, Jon [6 ]
Wilson, Matthew [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sheffield, Sch Hlth & Related Res ScHARR, Sheffield, England
[2] Northern Gen Hosp, Emergency Dept, Sheffield, England
[3] Univ Warwick, Warwick Clin Trials Unit, Coventry, England
[4] Yorkshire Ambulance Serv NHS Trust, Wakefield, England
[5] West Midlands Ambulance Serv Univ NHS Fdn Trust, Brierley Hill, Midlands, England
[6] Univ Sheffield, Acad Unit Primary Med Care, Sheffield, England
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS DEFINITIONS; IN-HOSPITAL MORTALITY; COST-EFFECTIVENESS; SEPTIC PATIENTS; PROGNOSTIC ACCURACY; ANTIBIOTIC-THERAPY; SCORING SYSTEM; CARE; PROCALCITONIN; MULTICENTER;
D O I
10.3310/NDTY2403
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Guidelines for sepsis recommend treating those at highest risk within 1 hour. The emergency care system can only achieve this if sepsis is recognised and prioritised. Ambulance services can use prehospital early warning scores alongside paramedic diagnostic impression to prioritise patients for treatment or early assessment in the emergency department. Objectives: To determine the accuracy, impact and cost-effectiveness of using early warning scores alongside paramedic diagnostic impression to identify sepsis requiring urgent treatment. Design: Retrospective diagnostic cohort study and decision -analytic modelling of operational consequences and cost-effectiveness. Setting: Two ambulance services and four acute hospitals in England. Participants: Adults transported to hospital by emergency ambulance, excluding episodes with injury, mental health problems, cardiac arrest, direct transfer to specialist services, or no vital signs recorded. Interventions: Twenty-one early warning scores used alongside paramedic diagnostic impression, categorised as sepsis, infection, non-specific presentation, or other specific presentation. Main outcome measures: Proportion of cases prioritised at the four hospitals; diagnostic accuracy for the sepsis -3 definition of sepsis and receiving urgent treatment (primary reference standard); daily number of cases with and without sepsis prioritised at a large and a small hospital; the minimum treatment effect associated with prioritisation at which each strategy would be cost-effective, compared to no prioritisation, assuming willingness to pay 20,000 pound per quality -adjusted life -year gained. Results: Data from 95,022 episodes involving 71,204 patients across four hospitals showed that most early warning scores operating at their pre -specified thresholds would prioritise more than 10% of cases when applied to non-specific attendances or all attendances. Data from 12,870 episodes at one hospital identified 348 (2.7%) with the primary reference standard. The National Early Warning Score, version 2 (NEWS2), had the highest area under the receiver operating characteristic curve when applied only to patients with a paramedic diagnostic impression of sepsis or infection (0.756, 95% confidence interval 0.729 to 0.783) or sepsis alone (0.655, 95% confidence interval 0.63 to 0.68). None of the strategies provided high sensitivity (> 0.8) with acceptable positive predictive value (> 0.15). NEWS2 provided combinations of sensitivity and specificity that were similar or superior to all other early warning scores. Applying NEWS2 to paramedic diagnostic impression of sepsis or infection with thresholds of > 4, > 6 and > 8 respectively provided sensitivities and positive predictive values (95% confidence interval) of 0.522 (0.469 to 0.574) and 0.216 (0.189 to 0.245), 0.447 (0.395 to 0.499) and 0.274 (0.239 to 0.313), and 0.314 (0.268 to 0.365) and 0.333 (confidence interval 0.284 to 0.386). The mortality relative risk reduction from prioritisation at which each strategy would be cost-effective exceeded 0.975 for all strategies analysed. Limitations: We estimated accuracy using a sample of older patients at one hospital. Reliable evidence was not available to estimate the effectiveness of prioritisation in the decision -analytic modelling. Conclusions: No strategy is ideal but using NEWS2, in patients with a paramedic diagnostic impression of infection or sepsis could identify one-third to half of sepsis cases without prioritising unmanageable numbers. No other score provided clearly superior accuracy to NEWS2. Research is needed to develop better definition, diagnosis and treatments for sepsis.
引用
收藏
页数:124
相关论文
共 12 条
  • [1] Prehospital early warning scores for adults with suspected sepsis: retrospective diagnostic cohort study
    Goodacre, Steve
    Sutton, Laura
    Thomas, Ben
    Hawksworth, Olivia
    Iftikhar, Khurram
    Croft, Susan
    Fuller, Gordon
    Waterhouse, Simon
    Hind, Daniel
    Bradburn, Mike
    Smyth, Michael Anthony
    Perkins, Gavin D.
    Millins, Mark
    Rosser, Andy
    Dickson, Jon M.
    Wilson, Matthew Joseph
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2023, 40 (11) : 768 - 776
  • [2] Modified National Early Warning Scores (MNEWS) for Predicting the Outcomes of Suspected Sepsis Patients; A Prospective Cohort Study
    Diskumpon, Nipon
    Ularnkul, Busabong
    Srivilaithon, Winchana
    Phungoen, Pariwat
    Daorattanachai, Klattichal
    ARCHIVES OF ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2025, 13 (01)
  • [3] Prognostic accuracy of triage tools for adults with suspected COVID-19 in a prehospital setting: an observational cohort study
    Marincowitz, Carl
    Sutton, Laura
    Stone, Tony
    Pilbery, Richard
    Campbell, Richard
    Thomas, Benjamin
    Turner, Janette
    Bath, Peter A.
    Bell, Fiona
    Biggs, Katie
    Hasan, Madina
    Hopfgartner, Frank
    Mazumdar, Suvodeep
    Petrie, Jennifer
    Goodacre, Steve
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2022, 39 (04) : 317 - U10
  • [4] A Multicenter Observational Prospective Cohort Study of Association of the Prehospital National Early Warning Score 2 and Hospital Triage with Early Mortality
    Martin-Rodriguez, Francisco
    Lopez-Izquierdo, Raul
    del Pozo Vegas, Carlos
    Delgado-Benito, Juan F.
    del Pozo Perez, Carmen
    Carbajosa Rodriguez, Virginia
    Mayo Iscar, Agustin
    Luis Martin-Conty, Jose
    Escudero Cuadrillero, Carlos
    Castro-Villamor, Miguel A.
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 2019
  • [5] The Value of Prehospital Early Warning Scores to Predict in-Hospital Clinical Deterioration: A Multicenter, Observational Base-Ambulance Study
    Martin-Rodriguez, Francisco
    Sanz-Garcia, Ancor
    Medina-Lozano, Elena
    Castro Villamor, Miguel Angel
    Carbajosa Rodriguez, Virginia
    del Pozo Vegas, Carlos
    Fadrique Millan, Laura Natividad
    Rabbione, Guillermo Ortega
    Martin-Conty, Jose Luis
    Lopez-Izquierdo, Raul
    PREHOSPITAL EMERGENCY CARE, 2021, 25 (05) : 597 - 606
  • [6] Improving the Performance of Clinical Decision Support for Early Detection of Sepsis: A Retrospective Observational Cohort Study
    Li, Ling
    Rathnayake, Kasun
    Green, Malcolm
    Fullick, Mary
    Shetty, Amith
    Walter, Scott
    Braithwaite, Jeffrey
    Lander, Harvey
    Westbrook, Johanna, I
    MEDINFO 2019: HEALTH AND WELLBEING E-NETWORKS FOR ALL, 2019, 264 : 679 - 683
  • [7] Predicting mortality in patients with suspected sepsis at the Emergency Department; A retrospective cohort study comparing qSOFA, SIRS and National Early Warning Score
    Brink, Anniek
    Alsma, Jelmer
    Verdonschot, Rob Johannes Carel Gerardus
    Rood, Pleunie Petronella Marie
    Zietse, Robert
    Lingsma, Hester Floor
    Schuit, Stephanie Catherine Elisabeth
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (01):
  • [8] Glucose as an additional parameter to National Early Warning Score (NEWS) in prehospital setting enhances identification of patients at risk of death: an observational cohort study
    Vihonen, Hanna
    Laaperi, Mitja
    Kuisma, Markku
    Pirneskoski, Jussi
    Nurmi, Jouni
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2020, 37 (05) : 286 - 292
  • [9] Comparison of eight prehospital early warning scores in life-threatening acute respiratory distress: a prospective, observational, multicentre, ambulance-based, external validation study
    Villamor, Miguel A. Castro
    Alonso-Sanz, Maria
    Lopez-Izquierdo, Raul
    Benito, Juan F. Delgado
    Vegas, Carlos del Pozo
    Torres, Santiago Lopez
    Soriano, Joan B.
    Martin-Conty, Jose L.
    Sanz-Garcia, Ancor
    Martin-Rodriguez, Francisco
    LANCET DIGITAL HEALTH, 2024, 6 (03): : e166 - e175
  • [10] Accuracy of National Early Warning Score 2 (NEWS2) in Prehospital Triage on In-Hospital Early Mortality: A Multi-Center Observational Prospective Cohort Study
    Martin-Rodriguez, Francisco
    Lopez-Izquierdo, Raul
    del Pozo Vegas, Carlos
    Delgado Benito, Juan F.
    Carbajosa Rodriguez, Virginia
    Diego Rasilla, Maria N.
    Martin Conty, Jose Luis
    Mayo Iscar, Agustin
    Otero de la Torre, Santiago
    Mendez Martin, Violante
    Castro Villamor, Miguel A.
    PREHOSPITAL AND DISASTER MEDICINE, 2019, 34 (06) : 610 - 618