Biological pathways underlying the association of red cell distribution width and adverse clinical outcome: Results of a prospective cohort study

Red cell distribution width (RDW) predicts disease outcome in several patient populations, but its prognostic value in addition to other disease parameters in unselected medical inpatients remains unclear. Our aim was to investigate the association of admission RDW levels and mortality adjusted for...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2018-01, Vol.13 (1), p.e0191280-e0191280
Hauptverfasser: Zurauskaite, Giedre, Meier, Marc, Voegeli, Alaadin, Koch, Daniel, Haubitz, Sebastian, Kutz, Alexander, Bernasconi, Luca, Huber, Andreas, Bargetzi, Mario, Mueller, Beat, Schuetz, Philipp
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Red cell distribution width (RDW) predicts disease outcome in several patient populations, but its prognostic value in addition to other disease parameters in unselected medical inpatients remains unclear. Our aim was to investigate the association of admission RDW levels and mortality adjusted for several disease pathways in unselected medical patients from a previous multicenter study. We included consecutive adult, medical patients at the time point of hospital admission through the emergency department into this observational, cohort study. The primary endpoint was mortality at 30-day. To study association of admission RDW and outcomes, we calculated regression analysis with step-wise inclusion of clinical and laboratory parameters from different biological pathways. The 30-day mortality of the 4273 included patients was 5.6% and increased from 1.4% to 14.3% from the lowest to the highest RDW quartile. There was a strong association of RDW and mortality in unadjusted analysis (OR 1.32; 95%CI 1.27-1.39, p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0191280