Ash Kristian, Hayes Galina M, Goggs Robert, Sumner Julia P
Department of Clinical Sciences, Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, Ithaca, NY.
J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio). 2018 May;28(3):192-200. doi: 10.1111/vec.12717. Epub 2018 Apr 24.
To examine the animal trauma triage (ATT) and modified Glasgow Coma Scale (mGCS) scores as predictors of mortality outcome (death or euthanasia) in injured dogs.
Observational cohort study conducted from September 2013 to March 2015 with follow-up until death or hospital discharge.
Nine veterinary hospitals including private referral and veterinary teaching hospitals.
Consecutive sample of 3,599 dogs with complete data entries recruited into the Veterinary Committee on Trauma patient registry.
None.
We compared the predictive power (area under receiver operating characteristic [AUROC]) and calibration of the ATT and mGCS scores to their components. Overall mortality risk was 7.3% (n = 264). Incidence of head trauma was 9.5% (n = 341). The ATT score showed a linear relationship with mortality risk. Discriminatory performance of the ATT score was excellent with AUROC = 0.92 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.91 to 0.94) and pseudo R = 0.42. Each ATT score increase of 1 point was associated with an increase in mortality odds of 2.07 (95% CI = 1.94-2.21, P < 0.001). The "eye/muscle/integument" category of the ATT showed poor discrimination (AUROC = 0.55). When this component together with the skeletal and cardiac components were omitted from calculation of the overall score, there was no loss in discriminatory capacity (AUROC = 0.92 vs 0.91, P = 0.09) compared with the full score. The mGCS showed good performance overall, but performance improved when restricted to head trauma patients (AUROC = 0.84, 95% CI = 0.79-0.90, n = 341 vs 0.82, 95% CI = 0.79-0.85, n = 3599). The motor component of the mGCS showed the best predictive performance (AUROC = 0.79 vs 0.66/0.69); however, the full score performed better than the motor component alone (P = 0.002). When assessment was restricted to patients with head injury (n = 341), the ATT score still performed better than the mGCS (AUROC = 0.90 vs 0.84, P = 0.04).
In external validation on a large, multicenter dataset, the ATT score showed excellent discrimination and calibration; however, a more parsimonious score calculated on only the perfusion, respiratory, and neurological categories showed equivalent performance.
研究动物创伤分诊(ATT)和改良格拉斯哥昏迷量表(mGCS)评分对受伤犬只死亡结局(死亡或安乐死)的预测价值。
2013年9月至2015年3月进行的观察性队列研究,随访至死亡或出院。
9家兽医医院,包括私立转诊医院和兽医教学医院。
连续抽取3599只犬只纳入兽医创伤委员会患者登记系统,所有犬只均有完整的数据记录。
无。
比较ATT和mGCS评分及其各组成部分的预测能力(受试者工作特征曲线下面积[AUROC])和校准情况。总体死亡风险为7.3%(n = 264)。头部创伤发生率为9.5%(n = 341)。ATT评分与死亡风险呈线性关系。ATT评分的鉴别性能极佳,AUROC = 0.92(95%置信区间[CI] 0.91至0.94),伪R = 0.42。ATT评分每增加1分,死亡几率增加2.07(95% CI = 1.94 - 2.21,P < 0.001)。ATT的“眼/肌肉/皮肤”类别鉴别能力较差(AUROC = 0.55)。从总分计算中省略该组成部分以及骨骼和心脏组成部分后,与满分相比,鉴别能力无损失(AUROC = 0.92对0.91,P = 0.09)。mGCS总体表现良好,但仅针对头部创伤患者时性能有所提高(AUROC = 0.84,95% CI = 0.79 - 0.90,n = 341对0.82,95% CI = 0.79 - 0.85,n = 3599)。mGCS的运动部分显示出最佳预测性能(AUROC = 0.79对0.66/0.69);然而,满分的表现优于单独的运动部分(P = 0.002)。当评估仅限于头部受伤患者(n = 341)时,ATT评分仍比mGCS表现更好(AUROC = 0.90对0.84,P = 0.04)。
在一个大型多中心数据集的外部验证中,ATT评分显示出极佳的鉴别能力和校准情况;然而,仅基于灌注、呼吸和神经类别计算的更简洁评分表现相当。