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- Naomi George, Thuy Nhu Thai, Paul S Chan, and Mark H Ebell.
- Division of Critical Care, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, United States; Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States. Electronic address: nrgeorge@gmail.com.
- Resuscitation. 2020 Jan 1; 146: 162-169.
BackgroundThe Good Outcome Following Attempted Resuscitation (GO-FAR) Score uses pre-arrest factors to predict survival after In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (IHCA) with minimal neurological dysfunction, (cerebral performance category (CPC) ≤1). Moderate neurological dysfunction (CPC ≤2) may be a more acceptable outcome.ObjectiveTo predict survival after IHCA with mild or moderate neurological dysfunction based on pre-arrest factors.Methods52,468 patients with IHCA from 2012-2017. Data was divided into training (44%), testing (22%), and validation (34%) sets. Univariate analysis was used to identify variables with >3% difference in survival with CPC ≤2. These variables carried forward to the multivariate logistic regression model. The most parsimonious model that best classified patients as having a very poor (≤5%), below average (≤10%), average (11%-30%), or above average (>30%) likelihood of survival with CPC ≤2 was chosen.ResultsAge >85, admission CPC <2, and non-surgical admission were strongly association with poor survival (-12.1%, -14.4%, and -18%, respectively). Nine variables were included in the logistic regression analysis. The final updated model, GO FAR 2, categorized 6.2% of patients with a very poor predicted survival, 24.8% of patients with a below average predicted survival, and 11.3% with above average predicted survival. The observed survival among those with very poor predicted survival was 4.5%.ConclusionThe GO FAR 2 score provides clinicians with a prognostic estimate of the likelihood of a good outcome after IHCA based on pre-arrest patient factors. Future research is required to validate the GO-FAR 2 score.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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