Title of article
Prediction of mortality from catastrophic burns in children
Author/Authors
Marcus Spies، نويسنده , , David N. Herndon، نويسنده , , Judah I Rosenblatt، نويسنده , , Arthur P. Sanford، نويسنده , , Steven E Wolf، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
6
From page
989
To page
994
Abstract
Background
We previously developed a model to predict survival in massive paediatric burns (>80% total body surface area [TBSA]). This model included not only demographic variables, but also variables obtained throughout the hospital course. We aimed to prospectively validate our model for accuracy of outcome prediction.
Methods
We admitted 33 paediatric burn patients with burns greater than 80% TBSA. We recorded age, burn size, inhalation injury, resuscitation, packed-cell volume at admission, base deficit, serum osmolarity, sepsis, inotropic support, platelet count, creatinine, and ventilator dependency. We entered these data into our previous models.
Results
20 male and 13 female children with mean age 7•6 (SD 1) years with TBSA burns of 88% (SD 1; full thickness 86% [SD 1]) were admitted. Mortality was 39•4% (13 of 30). When all variables were integrated into our final model, we predicted outcome with 97% accuracy. When we used a model based only on demographic characteristics of age, burn size, and presence of inhalation injury, outcome was correctly predicted in only 51% of patients.
Conclusions
We show prospectively that mortality in severely burned children can be reliably estimated at a burn centre, and that outcome cannot be reliably predicted on the basis of demographic and injury characteristics alone. These data suggest that all severely burned children should be given a course of treatment before consideration of treatment futility.
Journal title
The Lancet
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
The Lancet
Record number
558618
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