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Intensive care medicine · Jul 2005
Multicenter StudyMulticenter study of the multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in intensive care units: the usefulness of Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores in decision making.
- L Cabré, J Mancebo, J F Solsona, P Saura, I Gich, L Blanch, G Carrasco, M C Martín, and Bioethics Working Group of the SEMICYUC.
- Hospital de Barcelona, SCIAS, Diagonal 660, 08034, Barcelona, Spain. 10654lcp@comb.es
- Intensive Care Med. 2005 Jul 1;31(7):927-33.
ObjectiveThis study examined the incidence and mortality of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) in intensive care units, evaluated the limitation of life support in these patients, and determined whether daily measurement of the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) is useful for decision making.Design And SettingProspective, observational study in 79 intensive care units.Patients And ParticipantsOf the 7,615 patients admitted during a 2-month period we found 1,340 patients to have MODS.Measurements And ResultsWe recorded mortality and length of stay in the intensive care unit and the hospital and the maximum and minimum total SOFA scores during MODS. Limitation of life support in MODS patients was also evaluated. Stepwise logistic regression was used to determine the factors predicting mortality. The in-hospital mortality rate in patients with MODS was 44.6%, and some type of limitation of life support was applied in 70.6% of the patients who died. The predictive model maximizing specificity included the following variables: maximum SOFA score, minimum SOFA score, trend of the SOFA for 5 consecutive days, and age over 60 years. The model diagnostic yield was: specificity 100%, sensitivity 7.2%, positive predictive value 100%, and negative predictive value 57.3%; the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.807.ConclusionsThis model showed that in our population with MODS those older than 60 years and with SOFA score higher than 9 for at least 5 days were unlikely to survive.
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