PLOS Global Public Health (Jan 2024)

Prediction models for post-discharge mortality among under-five children with suspected sepsis in Uganda: A multicohort analysis.

  • Matthew O Wiens,
  • Vuong Nguyen,
  • Jeffrey N Bone,
  • Elias Kumbakumba,
  • Stephen Businge,
  • Abner Tagoola,
  • Sheila Oyella Sherine,
  • Emmanuel Byaruhanga,
  • Edward Ssemwanga,
  • Celestine Barigye,
  • Jesca Nsungwa,
  • Charles Olaro,
  • J Mark Ansermino,
  • Niranjan Kissoon,
  • Joel Singer,
  • Charles P Larson,
  • Pascal M Lavoie,
  • Dustin Dunsmuir,
  • Peter P Moschovis,
  • Stefanie Novakowski,
  • Clare Komugisha,
  • Mellon Tayebwa,
  • Douglas Mwesigwa,
  • Martina Knappett,
  • Nicholas West,
  • Nathan Kenya Mugisha,
  • Jerome Kabakyenga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003050
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
p. e0003050

Abstract

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In many low-income countries, over five percent of hospitalized children die following hospital discharge. The lack of available tools to identify those at risk of post-discharge mortality has limited the ability to make progress towards improving outcomes. We aimed to develop algorithms designed to predict post-discharge mortality among children admitted with suspected sepsis. Four prospective cohort studies of children in two age groups (0-6 and 6-60 months) were conducted between 2012-2021 in six Ugandan hospitals. Prediction models were derived for six-months post-discharge mortality, based on candidate predictors collected at admission, each with a maximum of eight variables, and internally validated using 10-fold cross-validation. 8,810 children were enrolled: 470 (5.3%) died in hospital; 257 (7.7%) and 233 (4.8%) post-discharge deaths occurred in the 0-6-month and 6-60-month age groups, respectively. The primary models had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.77 (95%CI 0.74-0.80) for 0-6-month-olds and 0.75 (95%CI 0.72-0.79) for 6-60-month-olds; mean AUROCs among the 10 cross-validation folds were 0.75 and 0.73, respectively. Calibration across risk strata was good: Brier scores were 0.07 and 0.04, respectively. The most important variables included anthropometry and oxygen saturation. Additional variables included: illness duration, jaundice-age interaction, and a bulging fontanelle among 0-6-month-olds; and prior admissions, coma score, temperature, age-respiratory rate interaction, and HIV status among 6-60-month-olds. Simple prediction models at admission with suspected sepsis can identify children at risk of post-discharge mortality. Further external validation is recommended for different contexts. Models can be digitally integrated into existing processes to improve peri-discharge care as children transition from the hospital to the community.