Value of three scoring systems in evaluating the prognosis of children with severe sepsis.
- Author:
Li-Bing ZHOU
1
;
Jiao CHEN
;
Xiao-Chen DU
;
Shui-Yan WU
;
Zhen-Jiang BAI
;
Hai-Tao LYU
Author Information
1. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou 215000, China. haitaosz@163.com.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Child;
Critical Illness;
Humans;
Organ Dysfunction Scores;
Prognosis;
ROC Curve;
Retrospective Studies;
Sepsis
- From:
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics
2019;21(9):898-903
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE:To study the predictive value of Pediatric Age-adapted Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score (pSOFA), Pediatric Risk of Mortality Score III (PRISM III), and Pediatric Critical Illness Score (PCIS) in children with severe sepsis.
METHODS:A retrospective analysis was performed for the clinical data of 193 hospitalized children with severe sepsis. According to the final outcome, these children were divided into a survival group with 151 children and a death group with 42 children. The scores of pSOFA, PRISM III, and PCIS were determined according to the worst values of each index within 24 hours after admission. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to analyze the efficiency of each scoring system in predicting the risk of death due to sepsis. Smooth curve fitting was used to analyze the correlation between the three scoring systems and the threshold effect of each scoring system. Decision curve analysis (DCA) was used to evaluate the application value of each scoring system.
RESULTS:The ROC analysis showed that PCIS and pSOFA had a similar predictive value (P=0.182) and that PRISM III and pSOFA had a similar predictive value (P=0.210), while PRISM III had a better predictive value than PCIS (P=0.045). PRISM III had the highest degree of fitting with prognosis, followed by pSOFA and PCIS. The DCA analysis showed that when the risk of death was 0.4 and 0.6 in children with severe sepsis and the three scoring systems were used as the basis for emergency intervention decision-making, pSOFA achieved the highest standardized net benefit, followed by PRISM III and PCIS.
CONCLUSIONS:All three scoring systems have a certain value in predicting the prognosis of children with severe sepsis, and pSOFA has a better value than PRISM III and PCIS.