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Cited 5 time in webofscience Cited 6 time in scopus
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Modified cardiovascular SOFA score in sepsis: development and internal and external validationopen access

Authors
Lee, Hui JaiKo, Byuk SungRyoo, Seung MokHan, EunahSuh, Gil JoonChoi, Sung-HyukChung, Sung PhilLim, Tae HoKim, Won YoungKwon, Woon YongHwang, Sung YeonJo, You HwanShin, JonghwanShin, Tae GunKim, KyuseokKorean Shock SocietyCho, HanjinHan, Kap SuYoon, Young-Hoon
Issue Date
Aug-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keywords
Sepsis; Mortality; Organ dysfunction scores; Severity of illness index
Citation
BMC Medicine, v.20, no.1
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BMC Medicine
Volume
20
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2021.sw.kumedicine/61416
DOI
10.1186/s12916-022-02461-7
ISSN
1741-7015
1741-7015
Abstract
Background The Sepsis-3 criteria introduced the system that uses the Sequential Organ-Failure Assessment (SOFA) score to define sepsis. The cardiovascular SOFA (CV SOFA) scoring system needs modification due to the change in guideline-recommended vasopressors. In this study, we aimed to develop and to validate the modified CV SOFA score. Methods We developed, internally validated, and externally validated the modified CV SOFA score using the suspected infection cohort, sepsis cohort, and septic shock cohort. The primary outcome was 28-day mortality. The modified CV SOFA score system was constructed with consideration of the recently recommended use of the vasopressor norepinephrine with or without lactate level. The predictive validity of the modified SOFA score was evaluated by the discrimination for the primary outcome. Discrimination was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC). Calibration was assessed using the calibration curve. We compared the prognostic performance of the original CV/total SOFA score and the modified CV/total SOFA score to detect mortality in patients with suspected infection, sepsis, or septic shock. Results We identified 7,393 patients in the suspected cohort, 4038 patients in the sepsis cohort, and 3,107 patients in the septic shock cohort in seven Korean emergency departments (EDs). The 28-day mortality rates were 7.9%, 21.4%, and 20.5%, respectively, in the suspected infection, sepsis, and septic shock cohorts. The model performance is higher when vasopressor and lactate were used in combination than the vasopressor only used model. The modified CV/total SOFA score was well-developed and internally and externally validated in terms of discrimination and calibration. Predictive validity of the modified CV SOFA was significantly higher than that of the original CV SOFA in the development set (0.682 vs 0.624, p < 0.001), test set (0.716 vs 0.638), and all other cohorts (0.648 vs 0.557, 0.674 vs 0.589). Calibration was modest. In the suspected infection cohort, the modified model classified more patients to sepsis (66.0 vs 62.5%) and identified more patients at risk of septic mortality than the SOFA score (92.6 vs 89.5%). Conclusions Among ED patients with suspected infection, sepsis, and septic shock, the newly-developed modified CV/total SOFA score had higher predictive validity and identified more patients at risk of septic mortality.
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