Injury | 2021

External validation of International Classification of Injury Severity Score to predict mortality in a Greek adult trauma population.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


INTRODUCTION\nThe International Classification of diseases- based Injury Severity Score (ICISS) obtained by empirically derived diagnosis-specific survival probabilities (DSPs) is the best-known risk-adjustment measure to predict mortality. Recently, a new set of pooled DSPs has been proposed by the International Collaborative Effort on Injury Statistics but it remains to be externally validated in other cohorts. The aim of this study was to externally validate the ICISS using international DSPs and compare its prognostic performance with local DSPs derived from Greek adult trauma population.\n\n\nMATERIALS AND METHODS\nThis retrospective single-center cohort study enrolled adult trauma patients (≥\xa016 years) hospitalized between January 2015 and December 2019 and temporally divided into derivation (n\xa0=\xa021,614) and validation cohorts (n\xa0=\xa014,889). Two different ICISS values were calculated for each patient using two different sets of DSPs: international (ICISSint) and local (ICISSgr). The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Models prediction was performed using discrimination and calibration statistics.\n\n\nRESULTS\nICISSint displayed good discrimination in derivation (AUC\xa0=\xa00.836 CI 95% 0.819-0.852) and validation cohort (AUC\xa0=\xa00.817 CI 95% 0.797-0.836). Calibration using visual analysis showed accurate prediction at patients with low mortality risk, especially below 30%. ICISSgr yielded better discrimination (AUC\xa0=\xa00.834 CI 95% 0.814-0.854 vs 0.817 CI 95% 0.797-0.836, p\xa0˂\xa0.05) and marginally improved overall accuracy (Brier score\xa0=\xa00.0216 vs 0.0223) compared with the ICISSint in the validation cohort. Incorporation of age and sex in both models enhanced further their performance as reflected by superior discrimination (p\xa0˂\xa0.05) and closer calibration curve to the identity line in the validation cohort.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nThis study supports the use of international DSPs for the ICISS to predict mortality in contemporary trauma patients and provides evidence regarding the potential benefit of applying local DSPs. Further research is warranted to confirm our findings and recommend the widespread use of ICISS as a valid measure that is easily obtained from administrative data based on ICD-10 codes.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.injury.2021.10.003
Language English
Journal Injury

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