Prospective validation of prognostic and diagnostic syncope scores in the emergency department

  • Jeanne du Fay de Lavallaz
  • Patrick Badertscher
  • Thomas Nestelberger
  • Rahel Isenrich
  • Òscar Miró
  • Emilio Salgado
  • Nicolas Geigy
  • Michael Christ
  • Louise Cullen
  • Martin Than
  • F Javier Martin-Sanchez
  • José Bustamante Mandrión
  • Salvatore Di Somma
  • W Frank Peacock
  • Damian Kawecki
  • Jasper Boeddinghaus
  • Raphael Twerenbold
  • Christian Puelacher
  • Desiree Wussler
  • Ivo Strebel
  • Dagmar I Keller
  • Imke Poepping
  • Michael Kühne
  • Christian Mueller
  • Tobias Reichlin
  • Maria Rubini Giménez
  • Joan Walter
  • Nikola Kozhuharov
  • Samyut Shrestha
  • Deborah Mueller
  • Lorraine Sazgary
  • Beata Morawiec
  • Piotr Muzyk
  • Ewa Nowalany-Kozielska
  • Michael Freese
  • Claudia Stelzig
  • Kathrin Meissner
  • Caroline Kulangara
  • Beate Hartmann
  • Ina Ferel
  • Zaid Sabti
  • Jaimi Greenslade
  • Tracey Hawkins
  • Katharina Rentsch
  • Arnold von Eckardstein
  • Andreas Buser
  • Wanda Kloos
  • Jens Lohrmann
  • Stefan Osswald
  • BASEL IX Investigators

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Various scores have been derived for the assessment of syncope patients in the emergency department (ED) but stay inconsistently validated. We aim to compare their performance to the one of a common, easy-to-use CHADS2 score.

METHODS: We prospectively enrolled patients ≥ 40 years old presenting with syncope to the ED in a multicenter study. Early clinical judgment (ECJ) of the treating ED-physician regarding the probability of cardiac syncope was quantified. Two independent physicians adjudicated the final diagnosis after 1-year follow-up. Major cardiovascular events (MACE) and death were recorded during 2 years of follow-up. Nine scores were compared by their area under the receiver-operator characteristics curve (AUC) for death, MACE or the diagnosis of cardiac syncope.

RESULTS: 1490 patients were available for score validation. The CHADS2-score presented a higher or equally high accuracy for death in the long- and short-term follow-up than other syncope-specific risk scores. This score also performed well for the prediction of MACE in the long- and short-term evaluation and stratified patients with accuracy comparative to OESIL, one of the best performing syncope-specific risk score. All scores performed poorly for diagnosing cardiac syncope when compared to the ECJ.

CONCLUSIONS: The CHADS2-score performed comparably to more complicated syncope-specific risk scores in the prediction of death and MACE in ED syncope patients. While better tools incorporating biochemical and electrocardiographic markers are needed, this study suggests that the CHADS2-score is currently a good option to stratify risk in syncope patients in the ED.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01548352.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0167-5273
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 15.10.2018

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PubMed 30224031