Is the New Injury Severity Score (NISS) a better outcome predictor than the Injury Severity Score (ISS) in patients with musculoskeletal injuries: A retrospective analysis?

被引:0
|
作者
Ede, Osita [1 ]
Uzuegbunam, Chisom O. [1 ]
Obadaseraye, Oke R. [1 ]
Madu, Kenechi A. [1 ]
Nwadinigwe, Cajetan U. [1 ]
Agu, Chijioke C. [2 ]
Anyaehie, Udo E. [1 ]
Iyidobi, Emmanuel C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Orthopaed Hosp, Dept Orthopaed & Trauma, Enugu, Nigeria
[2] Natl Orthopaed Hosp, Dept Radiol, Enugu, Nigeria
关键词
Injury Severity Score; New Injury Severity Score; receiver operator characteristic curve; musculoskeletal; trauma scores; CARE-UNIT ADMISSION; TRAUMA PATIENTS; MORTALITY; LENGTH;
D O I
10.1177/22104917231171934
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Purpose: The Injury Severity Score (ISS) is used to predict outcome after trauma. However, it is criticised because of flaws in its calculation of injury severity. The New Injury Severity Score (NISS) was proposed as an alternative. However, studies are conflicted on which is better. We compared both scales in predicting surgery, multiple surgeries, preoperative blood transfusion, hospital stay length and mortality in patients with orthopaedic injuries. Method: A retrospective cohort study that used the hospital's trauma database. Patients' data were extracted, and the outcome parameters noted. The ISS and NISS were calculated for each patient. The patients were dichotomised into discrepant and non-discrepant if both scores are different or the same, respectively. A receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve was generated for each outcome parameter, and the area under the curve (AUC) compared between the two scoring systems. Results: Four hundred and forty-seven (447) patients participated in this study. The participants' average age was 34.78 years (SD = 18.67), mean ISS score was 8.5 (SD = 5.9), while the average NISS was 9.4 (SD = 6.6). The NISS exceeded the ISS (discrepant) in 82 subjects (18.3%), while both scores are the same (non-discrepant) in 365 subjects (81.7%). The NISS outperformed the ISS in predicting multiple surgeries and hospital stay length, while the ISS better predicts mortality rate. Both performed similarly for predicting surgical intervention and blood transfusion. Conclusion: Both scores performed similarly and there is insufficient evidence to replace ISS with NISS.
引用
收藏
页码:226 / 232
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A comparative analysis of the Trauma and Injury Severity Score and the Injury Severity Score in predicting high-value care outcomes in children with traumatic brain injury
    Kazemi, Foad
    Liu, Jiaqi
    Nasr, Isam W.
    Robinson, Shenandoah
    Cohen, Alan R.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY-PEDIATRICS, 2024, 34 (06) : 557 - 565
  • [42] The thorax trauma severity score and the trauma and injury severity score: Do they predict in-hospital mortality in patients with severe thoracic trauma?: A retrospective cohort study
    Moon, Seong Ho
    Kim, Jong Woo
    Byun, Joung Hun
    Kim, Sung Hwan
    Choi, Jun Young
    Jang, In Seok
    Lee, Chung Eun
    Yang, Jun Ho
    Kang, Dong Hun
    Kim, Ki Nyun
    Park, Hyun Oh
    MEDICINE, 2017, 96 (42)
  • [43] Injury severity score associated with concurrent bladder injury in patients with blunt urethral injury
    Eidelman, Eric
    Stormont, Ian
    Churukanti, Gauthami
    Shreck, Evan
    Belay, Ruthie
    Capodice, Sarah
    Maass, Daniel
    Stein, Deborah M.
    Siddiqui, Mohummad Minhaj
    WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2019, 37 (05) : 983 - 988
  • [44] New Trauma and Injury Severity Score (TRISS) adjustments for survival prediction
    Domingues, Cristiane de Alencar
    Coimbra, Raul
    Poggetti, Renato Sergio
    Nogueira, Lilia de Souza
    Cardoso de Sousa, Regina Marcia
    WORLD JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SURGERY, 2018, 13
  • [45] How to define severely injured patients?-An Injury Severity Score (ISS) based approach alone is not sufficient
    Paffrath, Thomas
    Lefering, Rolf
    Flohe, Sascha
    INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED, 2014, 45 : S64 - S69
  • [46] Injury severity score associated with concurrent bladder injury in patients with blunt urethral injury
    Eric Eidelman
    Ian Stormont
    Gauthami Churukanti
    Evan Shreck
    Ruthie Belay
    Sarah Capodice
    Daniel Maass
    Deborah M. Stein
    Mohummad Minhaj Siddiqui
    World Journal of Urology, 2019, 37 : 983 - 988
  • [47] Older patients with traumatic brain injury present with a higher GCS score than younger patients for a given severity of injury
    Kehoe, A.
    Smith, J. E.
    Bouamra, O.
    Edwards, A.
    Yates, D.
    Lecky, F.
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2016, 33 (06) : 381 - +
  • [48] Maxillofacial Injury Severity Score: proposal of a new scoring system
    Zhang, J
    Zhang, Y
    El-Maaytah, M
    Ma, L
    Liu, L
    Zhou, LD
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ORAL AND MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY, 2006, 35 (02) : 109 - 114
  • [49] "Zooming" in strategies and outcomes for trauma cases with Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≥16: promise or passe?
    Doklestic, Krstina
    Loncar, Zlatibor
    Coccolini, Federico
    Gregoric, Pavle
    Micic, Dusan
    Bukumiric, Zoran
    Djurkovic, Petar
    Sengul, Demet
    Sengul, Ilker
    REVISTA DA ASSOCIACAO MEDICA BRASILEIRA, 2022, 68 (06): : 847 - 852
  • [50] The correlation between Injury Severity Score, vital signs, and hemogram values on mortality in firearm injuries
    Turan, Ozcan
    Eryilmaz, Mehmet
    Albuz, Ozgur
    ULUSAL TRAVMA VE ACIL CERRAHI DERGISI-TURKISH JOURNAL OF TRAUMA & EMERGENCY SURGERY, 2019, 25 (03): : 259 - 267