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Journal Article

Citation

Kilgo PD, Osler TM, Meredith W. J. Trauma 2003; 55(4): 599-606; discussion 606-7.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, WistonSalem, North Carolina 27157-1063, USA. pkilgo@wfubmc.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/01.TA.0000085721.47738.BD

PMID

15187768

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The prediction of outcome after injury must incorporate measures of injury severity, but there is no consensus on how many injuries should be used in calculating these measures. Initially, the single worst injury was used to predict outcome, but the introduction of the Injury Severity Score allowed up to three injuries to contribute to outcome prediction. Subsequently, other outcome prediction approaches used many (New Injury Severity Score [NISS]) or all (ICISS and Trauma Registry Abbreviated Injury Scale Score [TRAIS], which use International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision [ICD-9] and Abbreviated Injury Scale [AIS] survival risk ratios [SRRs], respectively) of a patient's injuries. The ability of only the most severe injury in predicting mortality has never been studied. Our objective was to determine the ability of a patient's worst injury to predict mortality. METHODS: A 10-fold cross-validation design was used to compute six scores for each of 160,208 patients from a large trauma database (the National Trauma Data Bank [NTDB]). The scores were ICISS, TRAIS, ICISS1 (only a patient's worst ICD-9 SRR), TRAIS1 (only a patient's worst AIS SRR), NISS (sum of squares of worst three AIS severity measures), and MAXAIS (worst AIS severity measure). Discrimination was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve. Logistic regression R2 gauged the proportion of variance each score explained. The Akaike information criterion, a deviance statistic (lower is better), assessed model fit. RESULTS: The receiver operating characteristic curve, R2, and Akaike information criterion statistics (NC_ICISS and NC_ICDSRR1 represents scores derived from the original North Carolina Hospital Discharge Database SRRs) are summarized in tabular form in the Results section. CONCLUSION: Regardless of scoring type (ICD/AIS SRRs or AIS severity), a patient's worst injury discriminates survival better, fits better, and explains more variance than currently used multiple injury scores.

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