Blood cell differential count discretization methods to predict survival in acutely ill adults reporting to the emergency room: a retrospective cohort study in 2020

Autor: Riccardo M. Fumagalli, Marco Chiarelli, Mauro P. Zago, Massimo Cazzaniga, Luciano D’angelo, Mario Cerino, Sabina Terragni, Elisa Lainu, Cristina Lorini, Claudio Scarazzati, Sara Tazzari, Francesca Porro, Simone Aldé, Morena Burati, William Brambilla, Daria Valsecchi, Paolo Spreafico, Valter Tantardini, Gianpaolo Schiavo, Claudio Bonato, Luca Cavalieri d’oro, Stefano Nattino, Matteo Locatelli, Luca A. M. Fumagalli
Rok vydání: 2023
Popis: AimsTo assess survival predictivity of baseline blood cell differential count (BCDC) discretization methods in acutely ill adults visiting the emergency room over one-year.MethodsRetrospective cohort study on one-year survival of adults reporting to the emergency room of the A. Manzoni Hospital (Italy) during 2020. Automated BCDC analysis performed at baseline, assessed hemoglobin, red cell mean volume and distribution width (RDW), platelet distribution width (PDW), platelet-hematocrit, absolute red blood cells, white blood cells, neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, and platelets. Discretization cutoffs were defined by: Benchmark laboratory reference values and Tailored (maximally selected rank statistics for linear and sigmoid-shaped distributed variables; optimal-equal hazard ratio (HR) method for U-shaped distributed variables. Explanatory variables (age, gender, inward admission) were analyzed using Cox multivariable regression. Receiver operating characteristic curves used the sum of Cox-significant variables in each method.ResultsOf 11052 patients (median age 67 years, interquartile range (IQR) 51–81, 48% female), 59% (n=6489) were discharged and 41% (n=4563) were admitted. After a 306-day median follow up (IQR 208–417 days), 9455 (86%) patients were alive and 1597 (14%) deceased. Increased HRs were associated with age > 73 years (HR=4.29 CI 3.78–4.87), and hospital admission (HR=2.05, CI 1.83–2.29). Age, sex, hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, RDW, PDW, neutrophils, lymphocytes and eosinophils were significant in overall. Benchmark included basophils and platelet count (area under the ROC curve (AUROC) 0.78). Tailored included monocyte counts and PCT (AUROC of 0.82).ConclusionsTailored discretization of BCDC provided meaningful insight regarding acute patient survival.Key messagesWhat is already known on this topicInformation on survival predictivity of BCDC is scarce, particularly in acutely ill patients considering that reference values are based on the general population.What this study addsLaboratory reference interval values predicting survival were hemoglobin, RDW, MCV, neutrophil, lymphocyte, eosinophil, and basophils counts, PLT, and PDW, independently of sex, age, and acute inward admission. Survival predictivity was improved by discretization of hemoglobin, RDW, MCV, neutrophil, lymphocyte, eosinophil, and monocyte counts, and PDW, according to the maximally selected rank statistics and optimal-equal HR method.How this study might affect research, practice, or policyBaseline BCDC discretized by tailored methods may be a useful biomarker for hazard warning in acute illness.
Databáze: OpenAIRE