• Minim Invasive Ther Allied Technol · Apr 2011

    Does the euroSCORE equally well predict perioperative cardiac surgical risk for men and women?

    • Parwis Massoudy, Jochen Sander, Daniel Wendt, Matthias Thielmann, Heinz Jakob, and Stefan Herget-Rosenthal.
    • Department for Cardiac Surgery, Klinikum Passau, Passau, Germany. parwis.massoudy@klinikum-passau.de
    • Minim Invasive Ther Allied Technol. 2011 Apr 1; 20 (2): 67-71.

    AbstractThe euroSCORE is a widely applied scoring system to estimate perioperative risk in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. It acknowledges an increased risk in women but does not apply a gender-specific weighing of individual risk indicators. We separately investigated the performance of the euroSCORE for men and women. Cardiac surgical patients operated in 2002 and 2003 (n = 1930) served as training group. Patients operated in 2004 served as validation group (n = 870). Using binary regression analysis, we developed a gender-specific model on the basis of the original euroSCORE risk indicators. The individual risk indicators were assigned gender-specific correlation coefficients. Applying ROC analysis to the validation group, the original euroSCORE performed well, with an area under curve (AUC) of 0.758, for men but poor, with an AUC 0.676, for women. After gender-specific re-weighing, ROC analysis revealed considerably improved predictive values of the modified euroSCORE. AUC for women increased to 0.755, AUC for men further increased to 0.772. The original euroSCORE failed to accurately predict perioperative mortality in women. A binary regression model, assigning a gender-specific weight to each of the risk indicators of the original euroSCORE, considerably improved the predictive power of the modified euroSCORE.

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