Tarnow-Mordi W, Ogston S, Wilkinson A R, Reid E, Gregory J, Saeed M, Wilkie R
Department of Child Health, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee.
BMJ. 1990 Jun 23;300(6740):1611-4. doi: 10.1136/bmj.300.6740.1611.
To investigate (a) which clinical variables and physiological measures of disease severity best predict death in very low birthweight infants and (b) their use in comparing mortality between two neonatal units.
Retrospective study of two cohorts of very low birthweight infants from overlapping time periods who received mechanical ventilation.
Two neonatal intensive care units (hospitals A and B).
262 Very low birthweight infants, 130 in hospital A, 132 in hospital B.
Death in hospital.
In hospital A the mean level of oxygenation in the first 12 hours of life, whether measured as inspired oxygen requirement (FIO2), arterial/alveolar oxygen (a/AO2) ratio, or alveolar-arterial oxygen difference (A-aDO2), was more closely associated with death than any of four "traditional" risk factors: low birth weight, short gestation, the diagnosis of respiratory distress syndrome, and male sex. Mean pH in the first 12 hours was as strongly associated with death as birth weight. Multiple logistic regression models were derived in infants from hospital A using the four traditional risk factors with measures of oxygenation and pH. The validity of each model was then tested in infants from hospital B. The model based on the four traditional risk factors alone predicted death in hospital B with only 31% sensitivity. Adding mean a/AO2 ratio and mean pH increased its sensitivity to 75%, and when mean a/AO2 ratio was replaced by mean FIO2 its sensitivity increased further to 81%. Based on crude mortality rates alone, the odds of death in hospital A versus hospital B were 0.67 (95% confidence interval 0.37 to 1.23). After correcting for traditional risk factors and mean FIO2 and mean pH, however, the odds of death in hospital A increased to 3.27 (1.35 to 7.92; p less than 0.01). This increased risk persisted after adjusting for the time difference between each cohort.
Crude comparisons of hospital mortality can be highly misleading. Reliable assessment of neonatal outcome is impossible without correcting for major risk factors, particularly initial disease severity. International agreement on a minimum core dataset of clinical and physiological information could improve neonatal audit and help to identify effective treatments and policies.
调查(a)哪些临床变量和疾病严重程度的生理指标能最好地预测极低出生体重儿的死亡情况,以及(b)这些指标在比较两个新生儿病房死亡率方面的应用。
对两个时间段重叠且接受机械通气的极低出生体重儿队列进行回顾性研究。
两个新生儿重症监护病房(医院A和医院B)。
262例极低出生体重儿,医院A有130例,医院B有132例。
住院期间死亡情况。
在医院A,出生后12小时内的平均氧合水平,无论以吸入氧需求(FIO2)、动脉/肺泡氧(a/AO2)比值还是肺泡 - 动脉氧分压差(A - aDO2)来衡量,与死亡的关联比四个“传统”危险因素(低出生体重、孕周短、呼吸窘迫综合征诊断及男性性别)中的任何一个都更紧密。出生后12小时内的平均pH值与死亡的关联程度与出生体重相当。利用四个传统危险因素以及氧合和pH指标,为医院A的婴儿建立了多因素逻辑回归模型。然后在医院B的婴儿中对每个模型的有效性进行测试。仅基于四个传统危险因素的模型对医院B中死亡情况的预测敏感性仅为31%。加入平均a/AO2比值和平均pH值后,敏感性提高到75%,当平均a/AO2比值被平均FIO2取代时,敏感性进一步提高到81%。仅基于粗死亡率,医院A与医院B相比死亡的比值比为0.67(95%置信区间0.37至1.23)。然而,在校正传统危险因素以及平均FIO2和平均pH值后,医院A死亡的比值比增加到3.27(1.35至7.92;p<0.01)。在调整每个队列之间的时间差异后,这种增加的风险仍然存在。
医院死亡率的粗略比较可能会产生很大误导。不校正主要危险因素,尤其是初始疾病严重程度,就不可能对新生儿结局进行可靠评估。就临床和生理信息的最小核心数据集达成国际共识,可能会改善新生儿审计,并有助于确定有效的治疗方法和政策。