Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery (Mar 2011)

A comparative study of four intensive care outcome prediction models in cardiac surgery patients

  • Lehmann Thomas,
  • Richter Markus,
  • Bossert Torsten,
  • Heldwein Matthias B,
  • Badreldin Akmal MA,
  • Doerr Fabian,
  • Bayer Ole,
  • Hekmat Khosro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1749-8090-6-21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 21

Abstract

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Abstract Background Outcome prediction scoring systems are increasingly used in intensive care medicine, but most were not developed for use in cardiac surgery patients. We compared the performance of four intensive care outcome prediction scoring systems (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II [APACHE II], Simplified Acute Physiology Score II [SAPS II], Sequential Organ Failure Assessment [SOFA], and Cardiac Surgery Score [CASUS]) in patients after open heart surgery. Methods We prospectively included all consecutive adult patients who underwent open heart surgery and were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) between January 1st 2007 and December 31st 2008. Scores were calculated daily from ICU admission until discharge. The outcome measure was ICU mortality. The performance of the four scores was assessed by calibration and discrimination statistics. Derived variables (Mean- and Max- scores) were also evaluated. Results During the study period, 2801 patients (29.6% female) were included. Mean age was 66.9 ± 10.7 years and the ICU mortality rate was 5.2%. Calibration tests for SOFA and CASUS were reliable throughout (p-value not Conclusions CASUS and SOFA are reliable ICU mortality risk stratification models for cardiac surgery patients. SAPS II and APACHE II did not perform well in terms of calibration and discrimination statistics.