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Is the SAPS II score valid in surgical intensive care unit patients?
Author(s) -
Sakr Yasser,
Marques Juliana,
Mortsch Stefan,
Gonsalves Matheus Demarchi,
Hekmat Khosro,
Kabisch Bjorn,
Kohl Matthias,
Reinhart Konrad
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of evaluation in clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.737
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2753
pISSN - 1356-1294
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2753.2010.01559.x
Subject(s) - medicine , intensive care unit , saps ii , cohort , receiver operating characteristic , emergency medicine , mortality rate , intensive care , cohort study , standardized mortality ratio , retrospective cohort study , apache ii , pediatrics , intensive care medicine
Aims and objectives We investigated the performance of the simplified acute physiology score II (SAPS II) in a large cohort of surgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients and tested the hypothesis that customization of the score would improve the uniformity of fit in subgroups of surgical ICU patients. Methods Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from all 12 938 patients admitted to a postoperative ICU between January 2004 and January 2009. Probabilities of hospital death were calculated for original and customized (C1‐SAPS II and C2‐SAPS II) scores. A priori subgroups were defined according to age, probability of death according to the SAPS II score, ICU length of stay (LOS), surgical procedures and type of admission. Results The median ICU LOS was 1 (1–3) day. ICU and hospital mortality rates were 5.8% and 10.3%, respectively. Discrimination of the SAPS II was moderate [area under receiver operating characteristic curve (aROC) = 0.76 (0.75–0.78)], but calibration was poor. This model markedly overestimated hospital mortality rates [standardized mortality rate: 0.35 (0.33–0.37)]. First‐level customization (C1‐SAPS II) did not improve discrimination in the whole cohort or the subgroups, but calibration improved in some subgroups. Second‐level customization (C2‐SAPS II) improved discrimination in the whole cohort [aROC = 0.82 (0.79–0.85)] and most of the subgroups (aROC range 0.65–86). Calibration in this model (C2‐SAPS II) improved in the whole cohort and in subgroups except in patients with ICU LOS 4–14 days and those undergoing neuro‐ or gastrointestinal surgery. Conclusions In this large cohort of surgical ICU patients, performance of the original SAPS II model was generally poor. Although second‐level customization improved discrimination and calibration in the whole cohort and most of the subgroups, it failed to simultaneously improve calibration in the subgroups stratified according to the type of surgery, age or ICU LOS.