• Am J Manag Care · Dec 2023

    Observational Study

    Development and validation of the COVID-19 Hospitalized Patient Deterioration Index.

    • Claudia Nau, Rebecca K Butler, Cheng-Wei Huang, Vang Kou Khang, Aiyu Chen, Beth Creekmur, Benjamin Broder, Christopher Subject, Adam L Sharp, Luis M Moreta-Sainz, Joon S Park, Akshay J Manek, Robert M Cooper, Sergio M Mendoza, Gang Luo, and Michael K Gould.
    • Department of Health Systems Science, Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, 98 S Los Robles Ave, Pasadena, CA 91101. Email: Claudia.L.Nau@kp.org.
    • Am J Manag Care. 2023 Dec 1; 29 (12): e365e371e365-e371.

    ObjectivesTo develop a COVID-19-specific deterioration index for hospitalized patients: the COVID Hospitalized Patient Deterioration Index (COVID-HDI). This index builds on the proprietary Epic Deterioration Index, which was not developed for predicting respiratory deterioration events among patients with COVID-19.Study DesignA retrospective observational cohort was used to develop and validate the COVID-HDI model to predict respiratory deterioration or death among hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Deterioration events were defined as death or requiring high-flow oxygen, bilevel positive airway pressure, mechanical ventilation, or intensive-level care within 72 hours of run time. The sample included hospitalized patients with COVID-19 diagnoses or positive tests at Kaiser Permanente Southern California between May 3, 2020, and October 17, 2020.MethodsMachine learning models and 118 candidate predictors were used to generate benchmark performance. Logit regression with least absolute shrinkage and selection operator and physician input were used to finalize the model. Split-sample cross-validation was used to train and test the model.ResultsThe area under the receiver operating curve was 0.83. COVID-HDI identifies patients at low risk (negative predictive value [NPV] > 98.5%) and borderline low risk (NPV > 95%) of an event. Of all patients, 74% were identified as being at low or borderline low risk at some point during their hospitalization and could be considered for discharge with or without home monitoring. A high-risk group with a positive predictive value of 51% included 12% of patients. Model performance remained high in a recent cohort of patients.ConclusionsCOVID-HDI is a parsimonious, well-calibrated, and accurate model that may support clinical decision-making around discharge and escalation of care.

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