Diagnostics (Dec 2024)

Fournier’s Gangrene Mortality Index (FGMI): A New Scoring System for Predicting Fournier’s Gangrene Mortality

  • Hüseyin Yönder,
  • Mehmet Çelik,
  • Mehmet Sait Berhuni,
  • Ahmed Cihad Genç,
  • Hasan Elkan,
  • Faik Tatlı,
  • Abdullah Özgönül,
  • Felat Çiftçi,
  • Fırat Erkmen,
  • Oğuz Karabay,
  • Ali Uzunköy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14232732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 23
p. 2732

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: Fournier’s gangrene is an aggressive, rapidly progressing, and life-threatening necrotizing fasciitis of the perineal and genital regions. Various scoring systems have been developed for predicting survival and prognosis in Fournier’s gangrene. This retrospective study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the newly developed Fournier’s gangrene mortality index (FGMI) in predicting mortality associated with Fournier’s gangrene. Methods: The study included patients over the age of 18 years who were followed-up with a diagnosis of Fournier’s gangrene in the general surgery clinics of three different hospitals in Şanlıurfa province between 2014 and 2024. The patients included in this study were divided into two groups: deceased (n = 20) and surviving (n = 149). In FGMI, the parameters used were age, creatinine level, albumin level, lymphocyte percentage, and neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio. Based on the total score and risk assessment, p = 0.5). Compared to the survivors, the deceased had higher neutrophil counts, neutrophil percentages, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratios, platelet-to-lymphocyte ratios, and C-reactive protein-to-albumin ratios, whereas lymphocyte counts, lymphocyte percentages, eosinophil counts, eosinophil percentages, monocyte counts, and monocyte percentages were lower, and these differences were statistically significant. According to receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, the ROC-area under the curve for predicting mortality based on an FGMI score of ≥5 was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.80–0.95) with a sensitivity of 90% and a specificity of 70% (p p < 0.001). Conclusions: The results reveal that the FGMI score is a scoring system that can predict mortality at the initial clinical presentation of patients with Fournier’s gangrene. Another important finding of the present study is that the LRINEC score was not sufficiently effective in predicting mortality.

Keywords