1. The International Classification of Disease Critical Care Severity Score demonstrates that pediatric burden of injury is similar to that of adults: Validation using the National Trauma Databank
- Author
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Christopher W. Snyder, Paul D. Danielson, Nicholas Poulos, Keith Thatch, Tara M. Barry, Nicole M. Chandler, Etienne E. Pracht, and David J. Ciesla
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Severity of injury ,Trauma registry ,Disease ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury Severity Score ,International Classification of Diseases ,Predictive Value of Tests ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Evidence-based medicine ,medicine.disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Emergency medicine ,Wounds and Injuries ,Surgery ,business ,Resource utilization ,Pediatric trauma - Abstract
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE Resource-based severity of injury (SOI) measures, such as the International Classification of Disease (ICD) Critical Care Severity Score (ICASS), may characterize traumatic burden better than standard mortality-based measures. The purpose of this study was to validate the ICASS in a representative national-level trauma cohort and compare SOI measures between children and adults. METHODS The National Trauma Databank was used to derive (2008-12) and validate (2013-15) ICASS and ICD Injury Severity Scores (ICISS, standard mortality-based SOI measure). SOI metrics and outcomes were compared between pediatric, adult, and elderly age groups. Logistic regression modeling evaluated predictors of critical care resource utilization. RESULTS Derivation and validation cohorts consisted of 3.90 and 1.97 million patients, respectively. ICASS strongly predicted actual critical care utilization (OR 1.04, 95% CI 1.04-1.04, p
- Published
- 2021