Prospective evaluation of an automated method to identify patients with severe sepsis or septic shock in the emergency department

被引:25
|
作者
Brown S.M. [1 ,2 ,7 ]
Jones J. [3 ]
Kuttler K.G. [1 ,4 ]
Keddington R.K. [5 ]
Allen T.L. [5 ,6 ]
Haug P. [4 ]
机构
[1] Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Intermountain Medical Center, Murray
[2] University of Utah School of Medicine, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Salt Lake City
[3] Clinical Intelligence and Decision Support, Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Pasadena
[4] Homer Warner Center for Informatics Research, Intermountain Healthcare, Murray
[5] Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City
[6] Institute for Healthcare Delivery Research, Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City
[7] Shock Trauma ICU, Intermountain Medical Center, 5121 S. Cottonwood Street, Murray, 84107, UT
关键词
Automated detection; Bayesian classifier; Sepsis;
D O I
10.1186/s12873-016-0095-0
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Sepsis is an often-fatal syndrome resulting from severe infection. Rapid identification and treatment are critical for septic patients. We therefore developed a probabilistic model to identify septic patients in the emergency department (ED). We aimed to produce a model that identifies 80 % of sepsis patients, with no more than 15 false positive alerts per day, within one hour of ED admission, using routine clinical data. Methods: We developed the model using retrospective data for 132,748 ED encounters (549 septic), with manual chart review to confirm cases of severe sepsis or septic shock from January 2006 through December 2008. A naïve Bayes model was used to select model features, starting with clinician-proposed candidate variables, which were then used to calculate the probability of sepsis. We evaluated the accuracy of the resulting model in 93,733 ED encounters from April 2009 through June 2010. Results: The final model included mean blood pressure, temperature, age, heart rate, and white blood cell count. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for the continuous predictor model was 0.953. The binary alert achieved 76.4 % sensitivity with a false positive rate of 4.7 %. Conclusions: We developed and validated a probabilistic model to identify sepsis early in an ED encounter. Despite changes in process, organizational focus, and the H1N1 influenza pandemic, our model performed adequately in our validation cohort, suggesting that it will be generalizable. © 2016 The Author(s).
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