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A novel prediction tool for mortality in patients with acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding requiring emergency hospitalization: a large multicenter study.

Authors :
Tominaga, Naoyuki
Sadashima, Eiji
Aoki, Tomonori
Fujita, Minoru
Kobayashi, Katsumasa
Yamauchi, Atsushi
Yamada, Atsuo
Omori, Jun
Ikeya, Takashi
Aoyama, Taiki
Sato, Yoshinori
Kishino, Takaaki
Ishii, Naoki
Sawada, Tsunaki
Murata, Masaki
Takao, Akinari
Mizukami, Kazuhiro
Kinjo, Ken
Fujimori, Shunji
Uotani, Takahiro
Source :
Scientific Reports; 3/4/2024, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-14, 14p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The study aimed to identify prognostic factors for patients with acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding and to develop a high-accuracy prediction tool. The analysis included 8254 cases of acute hematochezia patients who were admitted urgently based on the judgment of emergency physicians or gastroenterology consultants (from the CODE BLUE J-study). Patients were randomly assigned to a derivation cohort and a validation cohort in a 2:1 ratio using a random number table. Assuming that factors present at the time of admission are involved in mortality within 30 days of admission, and adding management factors during hospitalization to the factors at the time of admission for mortality within 1 year, prognostic factors were established. Multivariate analysis was conducted, and scores were assigned to each factor using regression coefficients, summing these to measure the score. The newly created score (CACHEXIA score) became a tool capable of measuring both mortality within 30 days (ROC-AUC 0.93) and within 1 year (C-index, 0.88). The 1-year mortality rates for patients classified as low, medium, and high risk by the CACHEXIA score were 1.0%, 13.4%, and 54.3% respectively (all P < 0.001). After discharge, patients identified as high risk using our unique predictive score require ongoing observation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175861105
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55889-7