Validation of prognostic indices for short term mortality in an incident dialysis population of older adults >75

Prognosis provides critical knowledge for shared decision making between patients and clinicians. While several prognostic indices for mortality in dialysis patients have been developed, their performance among elderly patients initiating dialysis is unknown, despite great need for reliable prognost...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-01, Vol.16 (1), p.e0244081
Hauptverfasser: Thorsteinsdottir, Bjorg, Hickson, LaTonya J, Giblon, Rachel, Pajouhi, Atieh, Connell, Natalie, Branda, Megan, Vasdev, Amrit K, McCoy, Rozalina G, Zand, Ladan, Tangri, Navdeep, Shah, Nilay D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prognosis provides critical knowledge for shared decision making between patients and clinicians. While several prognostic indices for mortality in dialysis patients have been developed, their performance among elderly patients initiating dialysis is unknown, despite great need for reliable prognostication in that context. To assess the performance of 6 previously validated prognostic indices to predict 3 and/or 6 months mortality in a cohort of elderly incident dialysis patients. Validation study of prognostic indices using retrospective cohort data. Indices were compared using the concordance ("c")-statistic, i.e. area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC). Calibration, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values were also calculated. Incident elderly (age ≥75 years; n = 349) dialysis patients at a tertiary referral center. Variables for six validated prognostic indices for short term (3 and 6 month) mortality prediction (Foley, NCI, REIN, updated REIN, Thamer, and Wick) were extracted from the electronic medical record. The indices were individually applied as per each index specifications to predict 3- and/or 6-month mortality. In our cohort of 349 patients, mean age was 81.5±4.4 years, 66% were male, and median survival was 351 days. The c-statistic for the risk prediction indices ranged from 0.57 to 0.73. Wick ROC 0.73 (0.68, 0.78) and Foley 0.67 (0.61, 0.73) indices performed best. The Foley index was weakly calibrated with poor overall model fit (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0244081