Early warning scores to assess the probability of critical illness in patients with COVID-19

Author:

Veldhuis LarsORCID,Ridderikhof Milan LORCID,Schinkel MichielORCID,van den Bergh Joop,Beudel Martijn,Dormans Tom,Douma Renee,Gritters van den Oever Niels,de Haan Lianne,Koopman Karen,de Kruif Martijn DORCID,Noordzij Peter,Reidinga Auke,de Ruijter Wouter,Simsek Suat,Wyers Caroline,Nanayakkara Prabath WB,Hollmann Markus

Abstract

ObjectiveValidated clinical risk scores are needed to identify patients with COVID-19 at risk of severe disease and to guide triage decision-making during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the performance of early warning scores (EWS) in the ED when identifying patients with COVID-19 who will require intensive care unit (ICU) admission for high-flow-oxygen usage or mechanical ventilation.MethodsPatients with a proven SARS-CoV-2 infection with complete resuscitate orders treated in nine hospitals between 27 February and 30 July 2020 needing hospital admission were included. Primary outcome was the performance of EWS in identifying patients needing ICU admission within 24 hours after ED presentation.ResultsIn total, 1501 patients were included. Median age was 71 (range 19–99) years and 60.3% were male. Of all patients, 86.9% were admitted to the general ward and 13.1% to the ICU within 24 hours after ED admission. ICU patients had lower peripheral oxygen saturation (86.7% vs 93.7, p≤0.001) and had a higher body mass index (29.2 vs 27.9 p=0.043) compared with non-ICU patients. National Early Warning Score 2 (NEWS2) ≥ 6 and q-COVID Score were superior to all other studied clinical risk scores in predicting ICU admission with a fair area under the receiver operating characteristics curve of 0.740 (95% CI 0.696 to 0.783) and 0.760 (95% CI 0.712 to 0.800), respectively. NEWS2 ≥6 and q-COVID Score ≥3 discriminated patients admitted to the ICU with a sensitivity of 78.1% and 75.9%, and specificity of 56.3% and 61.8%, respectively.ConclusionIn this multicentre study, the best performing models to predict ICU admittance were the NEWS2 and the Quick COVID-19 Severity Index Score, with fair diagnostic performance. However, due to the moderate performance, these models cannot be clinically used to adequately predict the need for ICU admission within 24 hours in patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection presenting at the ED.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,General Medicine,Emergency Medicine

Reference17 articles.

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2. Reproduced from: Royal College of Physicians . National early warning score (news) 2: standardising the assessment of acute-illness severity in the NHS. updated report of a working Party. London: RCP, 2017. https://wwwrcplondonacuk/projects/outputs/national-early-warning-score-news-2

3. The Value of Modified Early Warning Score (MEWS) in Surgical In-Patients: A Prospective Observational Study

4. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3)

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