Real-Time Risk Prediction on the Wards: A Feasibility Study
Critical Care Medicine
Kang MA et al
Objective: Failure to detect clinical deterioration in the hospital is
common and associated with poor patient outcomes and increased
healthcare costs. Our objective was to evaluate the feasibility and
accuracy of real-time risk stratification using the electronic Cardiac
Arrest Risk Triage score, an electronic health record-based early
warning score.
Design: We conducted a prospective black-box validation study. Data were
transmitted via HL7 feed in real time to an integration engine and
database server wherein the scores were calculated and stored without
visualization for clinical providers. The high-risk threshold was set a
priori. Timing and sensitivity of electronic Cardiac Arrest Risk Triage
score activation were compared with standard-of-care Rapid Response Team
activation for patients who experienced a ward cardiac arrest or ICU
transfer.
Setting: Three general care wards at an academic medical center.
Patients: A total of 3,889 adult inpatients.
Measurements and Main Results: The system generated 5,925 segments
during 5,751 admissions. The area under the receiver operating
characteristic curve for electronic Cardiac Arrest Risk Triage score was
0.88 for cardiac arrest and 0.80 for ICU transfer, consistent with
previously published derivation results. During the study period, eight
of 10 patients with a cardiac arrest had high-risk electronic Cardiac
Arrest Risk Triage scores, whereas the Rapid Response Team was activated
on two of these patients (p < 0.05). Furthermore, electronic Cardiac
Arrest Risk Triage score identified 52% (n = 201) of the ICU transfers
compared with 34% (n = 129) by the current system (p < 0.001).
Patients met the high-risk electronic Cardiac Arrest Risk Triage score
threshold a median of 30 hours prior to cardiac arrest or ICU transfer
versus 1.7 hours for standard Rapid Response Team activation.
Conclusions: Electronic Cardiac Arrest Risk Triage score identified
significantly more cardiac arrests and ICU transfers than standard Rapid
Response Team activation and did so many hours in advance.
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