Richardson D K, Phibbs C S, Gray J E, McCormick M C, Workman-Daniels K, Goldmann D A
Joint Program in Neonatology, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115.
Pediatrics. 1993 May;91(5):969-75.
Low birth weight is a major determinant of neonatal mortality. Yet birth weight, even in conjunction with other demographic markers, is inadequate to explain the large variations in neonatal mortality between intensive care units. This variation probably reflects differences in admission severity. The authors have recently developed the Score for Neonatal Acute Physiology (SNAP), an illness severity index specific for neonatal intensive care, and demonstrated illness severity to be a major determinant of neonatal mortality.
To define the relative contributions of birth weight and illness severity to the risk of neonatal mortality and to identify other significant independent risk factors.
Logistic regression was used to analyze data from a cohort of 1621 consecutive admissions to three neonatal intensive care units (92 deaths), to test six alternative predictive models. The best logistic model was then used to develop a simple additive clinical score, the SNAP Perinatal Extension (SNAP-PE).
These analyses demonstrated that birth weight and illness severity are powerful independent predictors across a broad range of birth weights and that their effects are additive. Below 750 g, there is an interaction between birth weight and SNAP. Other factors that showed independent predictive power were low Apgar score at 5 minutes and small size for gestational age. Separate derivation and test samples were used to demonstrate that the SNAP-PE is comparable to the best logistic model and has a sensitivity and specificity superior to either birth weight or SNAP alone (receiver-operator characteristic area .92 +/- .02) as well as excellent goodness of fit.
This simplified clinical score provides accurate mortality risk estimates for application in a broad array of clinical and research settings.
低出生体重是新生儿死亡的主要决定因素。然而,即使结合其他人口统计学指标,出生体重也不足以解释重症监护病房之间新生儿死亡率的巨大差异。这种差异可能反映了入院时病情严重程度的不同。作者最近开发了新生儿急性生理学评分(SNAP),这是一种针对新生儿重症监护的疾病严重程度指数,并证明疾病严重程度是新生儿死亡的主要决定因素。
确定出生体重和疾病严重程度对新生儿死亡风险的相对贡献,并识别其他重要的独立风险因素。
采用逻辑回归分析来自三个新生儿重症监护病房的1621例连续入院病例(92例死亡)的数据,以测试六种替代预测模型。然后使用最佳逻辑模型开发一个简单的相加临床评分,即SNAP围产期扩展评分(SNAP-PE)。
这些分析表明,出生体重和疾病严重程度在广泛的出生体重范围内都是强大的独立预测因素,且它们的作用是相加的。在出生体重低于750克时,出生体重与SNAP之间存在相互作用。其他显示出独立预测能力的因素包括5分钟时阿氏评分低和小于胎龄。使用单独的推导样本和测试样本证明,SNAP-PE与最佳逻辑模型相当,其敏感性和特异性优于单独的出生体重或SNAP(受试者工作特征曲线下面积为0.92±0.02),且拟合优度良好。
这种简化的临床评分可为广泛的临床和研究环境提供准确的死亡风险估计。