Back to Search
Start Over
Evaluation and improvement of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS2) for COVID-19: a multi-hospital study
- Source :
- BMC Medicine, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2021), BMC Medicine, Carr, E, Bendayan, R, Bean, D, Stammers, M, Wang, W, Zhang, H, Searle, T, Kraljevic, Z, Shek, A, Phan, H TT, London, K, Gupta, R K, Shinton, A J, Wyatt, M, Shi, T, Zhang, X, Pickles, A, Stahl, D, Zakeri, R, Noursadeghi, M, O'Gallagher, K, Rogers, M, Folarin, A, Karwath, A, Wickstrom, K E, Kohn-Luque, A, Slater, L, Cardoso, V R, Bourdeaux, C, Holten, A R, Ball, S, McWilliams, C, Roguski, L, Borca, F, Bachelor, J, Amundsen, E K, Wu, X, Gkoutos, G V, Sun, J, Pinto, A, Guthrie, B, Breen, C, Douiri, A, Wu, H, Curcin, V, Teo, J T, M Shah, A & Dodson, R J B 2021, ' Evaluation and Improvement of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS2) for COVID-19 : a multi-hospital study ', BMC Medicine, vol. 19, no. 23, 23 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01893-3, Carr, E, Bendayan, R, Bean, D, Stammers, M, Wang, W, Zhang, H, Searle, T, Kraljevic, Z, Shek, A, Phan, H T T, Muruet, W, Gupta, R K, Shinton, A J, Wyatt, M, Shi, T, Zhang, X, Pickles, A, Stahl, D, Zakeri, R, Noursadeghi, M, O'Gallagher, K, Rogers, M, Folarin, A, Karwath, A, Wickstrom, K E, Kohn-Luque, A, Slater, L, Cardoso, V R, Bourdeaux, C, Holten, A R, Ball, S, McWilliams, C, Roguski, L, Borca, F, Batchelor, J, Amundsen, E K, Wu, X, Gkoutos, G V, Sun, J, Pinto, A, Guthrie, B, Breen, C, Douiri, A, Wu, H, Curcin, V, Teo, J T, Shah, A M & Dobson, R J B 2021, ' Evaluation and improvement of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS2) for COVID-19 : a multi-hospital study ', BMC Medicine, vol. 19, no. 1, 23, pp. 23 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01893-3
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- BMC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Background The National Early Warning Score (NEWS2) is currently recommended in the UK for the risk stratification of COVID-19 patients, but little is known about its ability to detect severe cases. We aimed to evaluate NEWS2 for the prediction of severe COVID-19 outcome and identify and validate a set of blood and physiological parameters routinely collected at hospital admission to improve upon the use of NEWS2 alone for medium-term risk stratification. Methods Training cohorts comprised 1276 patients admitted to King’s College Hospital National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust with COVID-19 disease from 1 March to 30 April 2020. External validation cohorts included 6237 patients from five UK NHS Trusts (Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, University Hospitals Southampton, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, University College London Hospitals, University Hospitals Birmingham), one hospital in Norway (Oslo University Hospital), and two hospitals in Wuhan, China (Wuhan Sixth Hospital and Taikang Tongji Hospital). The outcome was severe COVID-19 disease (transfer to intensive care unit (ICU) or death) at 14 days after hospital admission. Age, physiological measures, blood biomarkers, sex, ethnicity, and comorbidities (hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular, respiratory and kidney diseases) measured at hospital admission were considered in the models. Results A baseline model of ‘NEWS2 + age’ had poor-to-moderate discrimination for severe COVID-19 infection at 14 days (area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) in training cohort = 0.700, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.680, 0.722; Brier score = 0.192, 95% CI 0.186, 0.197). A supplemented model adding eight routinely collected blood and physiological parameters (supplemental oxygen flow rate, urea, age, oxygen saturation, C-reactive protein, estimated glomerular filtration rate, neutrophil count, neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio) improved discrimination (AUC = 0.735; 95% CI 0.715, 0.757), and these improvements were replicated across seven UK and non-UK sites. However, there was evidence of miscalibration with the model tending to underestimate risks in most sites. Conclusions NEWS2 score had poor-to-moderate discrimination for medium-term COVID-19 outcome which raises questions about its use as a screening tool at hospital admission. Risk stratification was improved by including readily available blood and physiological parameters measured at hospital admission, but there was evidence of miscalibration in external sites. This highlights the need for a better understanding of the use of early warning scores for COVID.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
NEWS2 score
lcsh:Medicine
Disease
State Medicine
law.invention
Cohort Studies
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
law
Prediction model
Diabetes mellitus
Electronic Health Records
Humans
Medicine
030212 general & internal medicine
Pandemics
Aged
Receiver operating characteristic
SARS-CoV-2
business.industry
lcsh:R
COVID-19
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
General Medicine
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Early warning score
medicine.disease
Intensive care unit
United Kingdom
Confidence interval
3. Good health
prediction model
Early Warning Score
Emergency medicine
Blood parameters
Absolute neutrophil count
Female
business
Research Article
Cohort study
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17417015
- Volume :
- 19
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7463456c7e611cb586a09ab6d121065a