Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA; Crescenz Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA.
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2022 Mar;31(3):106277. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2021.106277. Epub 2022 Jan 7.
For patients with acute, serious neurological conditions presenting to the emergency department (ED), prognostication is typically based on clinical experience, scoring systems and patient co-morbidities. Because estimating a poor prognosis influences caregiver decisions to withdraw life-sustaining therapy, we investigated the consistency of prognostication across a spectrum of neurology physicians.
Five acute neurological presentations (2 with large hemispheric infarction; 1 with brainstem infarction, 1 with lobar hemorrhage, and 1 with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy) were selected for a department-wide prognostication simulation exercise. All had presented to our tertiary care hospital's ED, where a poor outcome was predicted by the ED neurology team within 24 hours of onset. Relevant clinical, laboratory and imaging data available before ED prognostication were presented on a web-based platform to 120 providers blinded to the actual outcome. The provider was requested to rank-order, from most to least likely, the predicted 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score. To determine the accuracy of individual outcome predictions we compared the patient's the actual 90-day mRS score to highest ranked predicted mRS score. Additionally, the group's "weighted" outcomes, accounting for the entire spectrum of mRS scores ranked by all respondents, were compared to the actual outcome for each case. Consistency was compared between pre-specified provider roles: neurology trainees versus faculty; non-vascular versus vascular faculty.
Responses ranged from 106-110 per case. Individual predictions were highly variable, with predictions matching the actual mRS scores in as low as 2% of respondents in one case and 95% in another case. However, as a group, the weighted outcome matched the actual mRS score in 3 of 5 cases (60%). There was no significant difference between subgroups based on expertise (stroke/neurocritical care versus other) or experience (faculty versus trainee) in 4 of 5 cases.
Acute neuro-prognostication is highly variable and often inaccurate among neurology providers. Significant differences are not attributable to experience or subspecialty expertise. The mean outcome prediction from group of providers ("the wisdom of the crowd") may be superior to that of individual providers.
对于因急性、严重神经系统疾病到急诊科(ED)就诊的患者,预后通常基于临床经验、评分系统和患者合并症。因为估计预后不良会影响护理人员决定停止维持生命的治疗,所以我们研究了一系列神经科医生在预后判断方面的一致性。
选择五个急性神经表现(2 个大半球梗死;1 个脑干梗死、1 个脑叶出血和 1 个缺氧缺血性脑病)进行全部门的预后模拟练习。所有这些都在我们的三级医院 ED 就诊,ED 神经科团队在发病后 24 小时内预测预后不良。在 ED 预后之前提供给 120 名提供者的相关临床、实验室和影像学数据可在基于网络的平台上获得,提供者对这些数据不知情。要求提供者对预测的 90 天改良 Rankin 量表(mRS)评分进行从最有可能到最不可能的排序。为了确定个体预后预测的准确性,我们将患者的实际 90 天 mRS 评分与最高预测 mRS 评分进行比较。此外,还将考虑所有应答者对 mRS 评分进行排序的情况下,计算出的群体“加权”结果与每个病例的实际结果进行比较。在预定义的提供者角色之间进行一致性比较:神经科住院医师与教员;非血管性与血管性教员。
每个病例的回答范围从 106-110 个不等。个体预测结果差异很大,在一个病例中,只有 2%的应答者的预测结果与实际 mRS 评分相符,而在另一个病例中,有 95%的预测结果相符。然而,作为一个整体,在 5 个病例中有 3 个病例的加权结果与实际 mRS 评分相符(60%)。在 4 个病例中,根据专业知识(中风/神经重症监护与其他)或经验(教员与住院医师),亚组之间没有显著差异。
急性神经预后判断在神经科医生中差异很大,且通常不准确。显著差异与经验或亚专业知识无关。来自一组提供者的平均预后预测(“群众的智慧”)可能优于个体提供者。