Predicting Risk of Hospital Admission in Patients With Suspected COVID-19 in a Community Setting: Protocol for Development and Validation of a Multivariate Risk Prediction Tool

被引:8
|
作者
Espinosa-Gonzalez, Ana Belen [1 ]
Neves, Ana Luisa [2 ,3 ]
Fiorentino, Francesca [1 ]
Prociuk, Denys [1 ]
Husain, Laiba [4 ]
Ramtale, Sonny Christian [1 ]
Mi, Emma [1 ]
Mi, Ella [1 ]
Macartney, Jack [4 ]
Anand, Sneha N. [4 ]
Sherlock, Julian [4 ]
Saravanakumar, Kavitha [5 ]
Mayer, Erik [1 ]
de Lusignan, Simon [4 ]
Greenhalgh, Trisha [4 ]
Delaney, Brendan C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Imperial Coll London, Dept Surg & Canc, London, England
[2] Imperial Coll London, Patient Safety Translat Res Ctr, Inst Global Hlth Innovat, London, England
[3] Univ Porto, Fac Med, Ctr Hlth Technol & Serv Res, Dept Community Med Hlth Informat & Decis CINTESIS, Porto, Portugal
[4] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Primary Care Hlth Sci, Oxford, England
[5] North West London Clin Commissioning Grp, Whole Syst Integrated Care, London, England
来源
JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS | 2021年 / 10卷 / 05期
基金
英国经济与社会研究理事会; 英国科研创新办公室;
关键词
COVID-19; severity; risk prediction tool; early warning score; hospital admission; primary care; electronic health records;
D O I
10.2196/29072
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: During the pandemic, remote consultations have become the norm for assessing patients with signs and symptoms of COVID-19 to decrease the risk of transmission. This has intensified the clinical uncertainty already experienced by primary care clinicians when assessing patients with suspected COVID-19 and has prompted the use of risk prediction scores, such as the National Early Warning Score (NEWS2), to assess severity and guide treatment. However, the risk prediction tools available have not been validated in a community setting and are not designed to capture the idiosyncrasies of COVID-19 infection. Objective: The objective of this study is to produce a multivariate risk prediction tool, RECAP-V1 (Remote COVID-19 Assessment in Primary Care), to support primary care clinicians in the identification of those patients with COVID-19 that are at higher risk of deterioration and facilitate the early escalation of their treatment with the aim of improving patient outcomes. Methods: The study follows a prospective cohort observational design, whereby patients presenting in primary care with signs and symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 will be followed and their data linked to hospital outcomes (hospital admission and death). Data collection will be carried out by primary care clinicians in four arms: North West London Clinical Commissioning Groups (NWL CCGs), Oxford-Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Research and Surveillance Centre (RSC), Covid Clinical Assessment Service (CCAS), and South East London CCGs (Doctaly platform). The study involves the use of an electronic template that incorporates a list of items (known as RECAP-V0) thought to be associated with disease outcome according to previous qualitative work. Data collected will be linked to patient outcomes in highly secure environments. We will then use multivariate logistic regression analyses for model development and validation. Results: Recruitment of participants started in October 2020. Initially, only the NWL CCGs and RCGP RSC arms were active. As of March 24, 2021, we have recruited a combined sample of 3827 participants in these two arms. CCAS and Doctaly joined the study in February 2021, with CCAS starting the recruitment process on March 15, 2021. The first part of the analysis (RECAP-V1 model development) is planned to start in April 2021 using the first half of the NWL CCGs and RCGP RSC combined data set. Posteriorly, the model will be validated with the rest of the NWL CCGs and RCGP RSC data as well as the CCAS and Doctaly data sets. The study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee on May 27, 2020 (Integrated Research Application System number: 283024, Research Ethics Committee reference number: 20/NW/0266) and badged as National Institute of Health Research Urgent Public Health Study on October 14, 2020. Conclusions: We believe the validated RECAP-V1 early warning score will be a valuable tool for the assessment of severity in patients with suspected COVID-19 in the community, either in face-to-face or remote consultations, and will facilitate the timely escalation of treatment with the potential to improve patient outcomes.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Predicting and explaining absenteeism risk in hospital patients before and during COVID-19
    Borges, Ana
    Carvalho, Mariana
    Maia, Miguel
    Guimaraes, Miguel
    Carneiro, Davide
    SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES, 2023, 87
  • [22] Development and validation of a nomogram for predicting in-hospital survival rates of patients with COVID-19
    Bai, Wen-Hui
    Yang, Jing-Jing
    Liu, Zhou
    Ning, Wan-Shan
    Mao, Yong
    Zhou, Chen-Liang
    Cheng, Li
    HELIYON, 2024, 10 (10)
  • [23] Nutritional risk at hospital admission is associated with prolonged length of hospital stay in old patients with COVID-19
    Mendes, Aline
    Serratrice, Christine
    Herrmann, Francois R.
    Gold, Gabriel
    Graf, Christophe E.
    Zekry, Dina
    Genton, Laurence
    CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2022, 41 (12) : 3085 - 3088
  • [24] Frailty as a Risk Factor for Depression after COVID-19 Hospital Admission
    Soler-Moratalla, Isabel Maria
    Salmeron, Sergio
    Lozoya-Moreno, Silvia
    Hermosilla-Pasamar, Ana Maria
    Henandez-Martinez, Antonio
    del Pozo, Julian Solis-Garcia
    Escribano-Talaya, Margarita
    Font-Payeras, Maria Antonia
    Garcia-Alcaraz, Francisco
    GERIATRICS, 2024, 9 (04)
  • [25] Development and validation of prognosis model of mortality risk in patients with COVID-19
    Ma, Xuedi
    Ng, Michael
    Xu, Shuang
    Xu, Zhouming
    Qiu, Hui
    Liu, Yuwei
    Lyu, Jiayou
    You, Jiwen
    Zhao, Peng
    Wang, Shihao
    Tang, Yunfei
    Cui, Hao
    Yu, Changxiao
    Wang, Feng
    Shao, Fei
    Sun, Peng
    Tang, Ziren
    EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION, 2020, 148
  • [26] Validation of a simple risk stratification tool for COVID-19 mortality
    Horvath, Angela
    Lind, Theresa
    Frece, Natalie
    Wurzer, Herbert
    Stadlbauer, Vanessa
    FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE, 2022, 9
  • [27] Development and validation of a simplified risk score for the prediction of critical COVID-19 illness in newly diagnosed patients
    Werfel, Stanislas
    Jakob, Carolin E. M.
    Borgmann, Stefan
    Schneider, Jochen
    Spinner, Christoph
    Schons, Maximilian
    Hower, Martin
    Wille, Kai
    Haselberger, Martina
    Heuzeroth, Hanno
    Ruthrich, Maria M.
    Dolff, Sebastian
    Kessel, Johanna
    Heemann, Uwe
    Vehreschild, Joerg J.
    Rieg, Siegbert
    Schmaderer, Christoph
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, 2021, 93 (12) : 6703 - 6713
  • [28] COVID-19 Inmate Risk Appraisal (CIRA): development and validation of a screening tool to assess COVID-19 vulnerability in prisons
    Goncalves, Leonel C.
    Baggio, Stephanie
    Weber, Michael
    Getaz, Laurent
    Wolff, Hans
    Singh, Jay
    Naegeli, Andreas
    Rossegger, Astrid
    Endrass, Jerome
    SWISS MEDICAL WEEKLY, 2021, 151
  • [29] External Validation of the IMPROVE Risk Score for Predicting Bleeding in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients
    Tao, Yuzhi
    Xu, Feiya
    Han, Jing
    Deng, Chaosheng
    Liang, Rui
    Chen, Lijun
    Wang, Binliang
    Zhang, Yunhui
    Liu, Weijia
    Wang, Dingyi
    Fan, Guohui
    Chen, Zhaofei
    Chen, Yinong
    Zhen, Kaiyuan
    Zhang, Yunxia
    Zhang, Shuai
    Huang, Qiang
    Wan, Jun
    Xie, Wanmu
    Yang, Peiran
    Zhang, Zhu
    Wang, Chen
    Zhai, Zhenguo
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2025,
  • [30] Development and validation of a simple risk scoring system for a COVID-19 diagnostic prediction model
    Guclu, Ozge Aydin
    Ursavas, Ahmet
    Ocakoglu, Gokhan
    Demirdogen, Ezgi
    Ozturk, Nilufer Aylin Acet
    Topcu, Dilara Omer
    Terzi, Orkun Eray
    Onal, Ugur
    Dilektasli, Asli Gorek
    Saglik, Imran
    Coskun, Funda
    Ediger, Dane
    Uzaslan, Esra
    Akalin, Halis
    Karadag, Mehmet
    TUBERKULOZ VE TORAKS-TUBERCULOSIS AND THORAX, 2023, 71 (04): : 325 - 334