Physiological scoring systems

  • Patients admitted to intensive care form a heterogeneous population
  • Differ in many respects including:
    • Age
    • Previous health status
    • Reason for admission
    • Severity of illness
  • All factors influence the prognosis of the patient
  • Scoring system have been developed to quantity this case mix
  • Scoring systems can be used for
    • Audit
    • Research
    • Clinical management
  • Scoring systems can be generic or specific
  • Limitations and errors associated with their use include
    • Missing data
    • Observer error
    • Inter-observer variability
    • Lead time bias

APACHE II score

  • A general measure of disease severity based on
    • Current physiologic measurements
    • Age
    • Previous health condition.
  • Scores range from 0-71
  • Increasing score associated with an increasing risk of hospital death.
APACHE II score = (acute physiology score) + (age points) + (chronic health points)

Acute Physiology Score

  • 1= Rectal temp (C)
  • 2 = Mean arterial pressure (mmHg)
  • 3 = Heart rate (bpm)
  • 4 = Respiratory rate (bpm)
  • 5 = Oxygen delivery (ml/min)
  • 6 = PO2 (mmHg)
  • 7 = arterial pH
  • 8 = Serum sodium (mmol/l)
  • 9 = Serum potassium (mmol/l)
  • 10 = Serum creatinine (mg/dl)
  • 11 = Haematocrit (%)
  • 12 = White cell count (103/ml)
+4 +3 +2 +1 0 +1 +2 +3 +4
1 >41 39-40.9 38-38.9 36-38.4 34-35.9 32-33.9 30-31.9 <29.9
2 >160 130-159 110-129 70-109 50-69 <49
3 >180 140-179 110-139 70-109 55-69 40-54 <39
4 >50 35-49 25-34 12-24 10-11 6-9 <5
5 >500 350-499 200-349 < 200
6 > 70 61-70 55-60 < 55
7 >7.7 7.6-7.69 7.5-7.59 7.3-7.49 7.25-7.3 7.15-7.2 < 7.15
8 >180 160-179 155-159 150-154 130-149 120-129 111-119 <110
9 >7 6-6.9 5.5-5.9 3.5-5.4 3-3.4 2.5-2.9 <2.5
10 >3.5 2-3.4 1.5-1.9 0.6-1.4 <0.6
11 >60 50-59.9 46-49.9 30-45.9 20-29.9 < 20
12 >40 20-39.9 15-19.9 3-14.9 1-2.9 < 1

Age Points

Age Points
<44 0
45-54 2
55-64 3
65-74 5
>75 6

Chronic Health Points

History of severe organ insufficiency Points
Non-operative patients 5
Emergency postoperative patients 5
Elective postoperative patients 2
  • Organ insufficiency or immunocompromised state must have preceded the current admission
  • Immunocompromised if:
    • Receiving therapy reducing host defences (immunosuppression, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, long term steroid use, high dose steroid therapy) or
    • Has a disease interfering with immune function such as malignant lymphoma or leukaemia
  • Hepatic insufficiency if:
    • Biopsy proven cirrhosis
    • Portal hypertension
    • Episodes of upper GI bleeding due to portal hypertension
    • Prior episodes of hepatic failure, coma or encephalopathy
  • Cardiovascular insufficiency if:
    • New York Heart Association Class IV
  • Respiratory insufficiency if:
    • Severe exercise restriction due to chronic restrictive, obstructive or vascular disease,
    • Documented chronic hypoxia, hypercapnia, secondary polycythaemia, severe pulmonary hypertension
    • Respirator dependency
  • Renal insufficiency if:
    • On chronic dialysis

POSSUM system

  • Outcome of surgery depends on several factors including:
    • Physiological status of the patient
    • Disease process that requires surgical intervention
    • Nature of operation
    • Pre and perioperative support
  • Raw morbidity and mortality data can provided a biased picture
  • POSSUM = Physiological and operative severity score for the enumeration of mortality and morbidity
  • Allows risk-adjusted assessment of surgical quality
  • Accurately predicts 30-day morbidity and mortality
  • Two-part scoring system including:
    • Physiological assessment
    • Operative severity

Physiological assessment

  • Provides exponential score on 12 variables
    • Age
    • Cardiac signs
    • Respiratory signs
    • Systolic blood pressure
    • Pulse
    • Coma score
    • Serum urea
    • Serum sodium
    • Serum potassium
    • Haemoglobin
    • White cell count
    • ECG

Operative severity

  • Provides exponential score on 6 variables
    • Operative magnitude
    • Number of operations within 30 days
    • Blood loss
    • Peritoneal contamination
    • Presence of malignancy
    • Timing of operation

Bibliography

Copeland G P,  Jones D,  Walters M.  POSSUM: a scoring system for surgical audit.  Br J Surg 1991;  78:  355-360.

Copeland G P.  The POSSUM system of surgical audit.  Arch Surg 2002;  137:  15-19.

Jones H J,  de Cossart L.  Risk scoring in surgical patients.  Br J Surg 1999;  86:  149-157.

Knaus W A, Draper E A. APACHE II: A severity of disease classification system. Crit Care Med 1985; 13: 818-829.

Neary W D,  Heather B P,  Earnshaw J J.  The physiological and operative severity score for the enumeration of mortality and morbidity (POSSUM).  Br J Surg 2003;  90:  157-165.

 

 
 

Last updated: 05 January 2008

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