The inability to walk unassisted at hospital admission as a valuable triage tool to predict hospital mortality in Rwandese patients with suspected infection

To assess the value of the inability to walk unassisted to predict hospital mortality in patients with suspected infection in a resource-limited setting. This is a post hoc study of a prospective trial performed in rural Rwanda. Patients hospitalized because of a suspected acute infection and who we...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-02, Vol.15 (2), p.e0228966-e0228966
Hauptverfasser: Kwizera, Arthur, Urayeneza, Olivier, Mujyarugamba, Pierre, Meier, Jens, Patterson, Andrew J, Harmon, Lori, Farmer, Joseph C, Dünser, Martin W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To assess the value of the inability to walk unassisted to predict hospital mortality in patients with suspected infection in a resource-limited setting. This is a post hoc study of a prospective trial performed in rural Rwanda. Patients hospitalized because of a suspected acute infection and who were able to walk unassisted before this disease episode were included. At hospital presentation, the walking status was graded into: 1) can walk unassisted, 2) can walk assisted only, 3) cannot walk. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses and two-by-two tables were used to determine the sensitivity, specificity, negative and positive predictive values of the inability to walk unassisted to predict in-hospital death. One-thousand-sixty-nine patients were included. Two-hundred-one (18.8%), 315 (29.5%), and 553 (51.7%) subjects could walk unassisted, walk assisted or not walk, respectively. Their hospital mortality was 0%, 3.8% and 6.3%, respectively. The inability to walk unassisted had a low specificity (20%) but was 100% sensitive (CI95%, 90-100%) to predict in-hospital death (p = 0.00007). The value of the inability to walk unassisted to predict in-hospital mortality (AUC ROC, 0.636; CI95%, 0.564-0.707) was comparable to that of the qSOFA score (AUC ROC, 0.622; CI95% 0.524-0.728). Fifteen (7.5%), 34 (10.8%) and 167 (30.2%) patients who could walk unassisted, walk assisted or not walk presented with a qSOFA score count ≥2 points, respectively (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0228966