Smith M E Beth, Chiovaro Joseph C, O'Neil Maya, Kansagara Devan, Quiñones Ana R, Freeman Michele, Motu'apuaka Makalapua L, Slatore Christopher G
1 Department of Medicine.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2014 Nov;11(9):1454-65. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201403-102OC.
Early warning system (EWS) scores are used by hospital care teams to recognize early signs of clinical deterioration and trigger more intensive care.
To systematically review the evidence on the ability of early warning system scores to predict a patient's risk of clinical deterioration and the impact of early warning system implementation on health outcomes and resource utilization.
We searched the MEDLINE, CINAHL, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials databases through May 2014. We included English-language studies of early warning system scores used with adults admitted to medical or surgical wards. We abstracted study characteristics, including population, setting, sample size, duration, and criteria used for early warning system scoring. For predictive ability, the primary outcomes were modeled for discrimination on 48-hour mortality, cardiac arrest, or pulmonary arrest. Outcomes for the impact of early warning system implementation included 30-day mortality, cardiovascular events, use of vasopressors, respiratory failure, days on ventilator, and resource utilization. We assessed study quality using a modified Quality in Prognosis Studies assessment tool where applicable.
Of 11,183 citations studies reviewed, one controlled trial and 20 observational studies of 13 unique models met our inclusion criteria. In eight studies, researchers addressed the predictive ability of early warning system tools and found a strong predictive value for death (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUROC], 0.88-0.93) and cardiac arrest (AUROC, 0.74-0.86) within 48 hours. In 13 studies (one controlled trial and 12 pre-post observational studies), researchers addressed the impact on health outcomes and resource utilization and had mixed results. The one controlled trial was of good quality, and the researchers found no difference in mortality, transfers to the ICU, or length of hospital stay. The pre-post designs of the remaining studies have significant methodological limitations, resulting in insufficient evidence to draw conclusions.
Early warning system scores perform well for prediction of cardiac arrest and death within 48 hours, although the impact on health outcomes and resource utilization remains uncertain, owing to methodological limitations. Efforts to assess performance and effectiveness more rigorously will be needed as early warning system use becomes more widespread.
医院护理团队使用早期预警系统(EWS)评分来识别临床恶化的早期迹象并触发更强化的护理。
系统评价早期预警系统评分预测患者临床恶化风险的证据,以及早期预警系统实施对健康结局和资源利用的影响。
我们检索了截至2014年5月的MEDLINE、CINAHL和Cochrane对照试验中央注册库数据库。我们纳入了对入住内科或外科病房的成年人使用早期预警系统评分的英文研究。我们提取了研究特征,包括人群、环境、样本量、持续时间以及用于早期预警系统评分的标准。对于预测能力,主要结局是针对48小时死亡率、心脏骤停或肺骤停的判别模型。早期预警系统实施的影响结局包括30天死亡率、心血管事件、血管升压药的使用、呼吸衰竭、呼吸机使用天数和资源利用。在适用的情况下,我们使用改良的预后来评估研究质量。
在审查的11183篇引用研究中,1项对照试验和20项关于13种独特模型的观察性研究符合我们的纳入标准。在8项研究中,研究人员探讨了早期预警系统工具的预测能力,发现在48小时内对死亡(受试者工作特征曲线下面积[AUROC],0.88 - 0.93)和心脏骤停(AUROC,0.74 - 0.86)有很强的预测价值。在13项研究(1项对照试验和12项前后观察性研究)中,研究人员探讨了对健康结局和资源利用的影响,结果不一。1项对照试验质量良好,研究人员发现死亡率、转入重症监护病房或住院时间没有差异。其余研究的前后设计存在重大方法学局限性,导致没有足够证据得出结论。
早期预警系统评分在预测48小时内的心脏骤停和死亡方面表现良好,尽管由于方法学局限性,对健康结局和资源利用的影响仍不确定。随着早期预警系统的使用越来越广泛,需要更严格地评估其性能和有效性。