Abstract

BackgroundMortality prediction of pneumonia by severity scores in patients with multiple underlying health conditions has not fully been investigated. This prospective cohort study is to identify mortality-associated underlying health conditions and to analyse their influence on severity-based pneumonia mortality prediction.MethodsAdult patients with community-acquired pneumonia or healthcare-associated pneumonia (HCAP) who visited four community hospitals between September 2011 and January 2013 were enrolled. Candidate underlying health conditions, including demographic and clinical characteristics, were incorporated into the logistic regression models, along with CURB (confusion, elevated urea nitrogen, tachypnoea, and hypotension) score as a measure of disease severity. The areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUROC) of the predictive index based on significant underlying health conditions was compared to that of CURB65 (CURB and age ≥ 65) score or Pneumonia severity index (PSI). Mortality association between disease severity and the number of underlying health conditions was analysed.ResultsIn total 1772 patients were eligible for analysis, of which 140 (7.9%) died within 30 days. Six underlying health conditions were independently associated: home care (adjusted odds ratio, 5.84; 95% confidence interval, CI, 2.28–14.99), recent hospitalization (2.21; 1.36–3.60), age ≥ 85 years (2.15; 1.08–4.28), low body mass index (1.99, 1.25–3.16), neoplastic disease (1.82; 1.17–2.85), and male gender (1.78; 1.16–2.75). The predictive index based on these conditions alone had a significantly or marginally higher AUROC than that based on CURB65 score (0.78 vs 0.66, p = 0.02) or PSI (0.78 vs 0.71, p = 0.05), respectively. Compared to this index, the AUROC of the total score consisting of six underlying health conditions and CURB score (range 0–10) did not improve mortality predictions (p = 0.3). In patients with one or less underlying health conditions, the mortality was discretely associated with severe pneumonia (CURB65 ≥ 3) (risk ratio: 7.24, 95%CI: 3.08–25.13), whereas in patients with 2 or more underlying health conditions, the mortality association with severe pneumonia was not detected (risk ratio: 1.53, 95% CI: 0.94–2.50).ConclusionsMortality prediction based on pneumonia severity scores is highly influenced by the accumulating number of underlying health conditions in an ageing society. The validation using a different cohort is necessary to generalise the conclusion.

Highlights

  • Mortality prediction of pneumonia by severity scores in patients with multiple underlying health conditions has not fully been investigated

  • In a population setting where a significant number of people have multiple underlying health conditions, we hypothesised that pneumonia severity scores alone should have a limitation of predicting mortality, and that co-evaluating underlying health conditions which patients already have before they contract pneumonia should provide more comprehensive mortality assessment

  • We found no study exclusively evaluating the influence of underlying health conditions on severity-based pneumonia mortality prediction

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Summary

Introduction

Mortality prediction of pneumonia by severity scores in patients with multiple underlying health conditions has not fully been investigated. In a society with an ageing population, pneumonia death rates show two major distributions, with one subgroup containing previously healthy patients with overwhelming septic shock or multiple organ failure, and the other containing patients with multiple underlying health conditions for death [4]. This rise in mortality is thought to be due to the increase in the latter subgroup [5, 6]. We found no study exclusively evaluating the influence of underlying health conditions on severity-based pneumonia mortality prediction

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