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Critical care medicine · Aug 2000
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyComparison of the performance of two general and three specific scoring systems for meningococcal septic shock in children.
- A Castellanos-Ortega and M Delgado-Rodríguez.
- Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla, Santander, Spain.
- Crit. Care Med. 2000 Aug 1;28(8):2967-73.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the performance at admission to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) of five severity scores, two general (the Pediatric Risk of Mortality [PRISM] II and III scores) and three specific for meningococcal septic shock (Leclerc, Glasgow Meningococcal Septicemia Prognostic Score [GMSPS], and Gedde-Dahl's MOC score) in children with this condition.DesignMulticenter, retrospective, cohort study.SettingThe PICUs from four tertiary centers.PatientsPatients were 192 children ranging in age from 1 month to 14 yrs consecutively admitted to the participating PICUs during a period of 12 yrs and 6 months (January 1983 to June 1995), who were diagnosed with presumed or confirmed meningococcal septic shock. Patients with a length of stay <2 hrs were excluded from the study.InterventionsClinical and laboratory data gathered during the first 2 hrs after admission were used to compute the scoring systems tested.Measurements And Main ResultsThere were 66 deaths (34%). Neisseria meningitidis was cultured from 142 (74%) children. GMSPS and PRISM II provided the best discriminative capability, as measured by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (SEM): 0.816 (0.036) and 0.803 (0.041), respectively. The other three scores gave lower receiver operating characteristic areas: PRISM III = 0.777 (0.043), MOC = 0.775 (0.037), and Leclerc = 0.661 (0.045). There was a statistically significant difference between the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve of GMSPS and Leclerc (p < .01) but not between the GMSPS and the remaining three scores. All five scores presented good calibration with no significant differences between observed and predicted mortality (Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test).ConclusionsThe specific GMSPS and the general pediatric severity system PRISM II performed better than the other three scores, being appropriate tools to assess severity of illness at admission to the PICU in children with presumed meningococcal septic shock.
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