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A risk score for predicting hospitalization for community-acquired pneumonia in ITP using nationally representative data

Authors :
Hao Jiang
Qiu-Sha Huang
Hui Liu
Ze-Ping Zhou
Jun Peng
Lin-Hua Yang
Xiao-Su Zhao
Jia Feng
Ming Hou
Xu-Liang Shen
Xiang-Yu Zhao
Ye-Jun Wu
Wen-Sheng Wang
Qianfei Wang
Ying-Jun Chang
Xing-Lin Wang
Xiao-Hui Zhang
Yue-Ying Li
Qiao-Zhu Zeng
Ru Feng
Hai-Xia Fu
Lan-Ping Xu
Yun He
Peng Zhao
Hongyu Zhang
Liang-Ming Ma
Qian Jiang
Yi Liu
Hui-Xin Liu
Jin Lu
Source :
Blood Adv
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2020.

Abstract

Infection is one of the primary causes of death from immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), and the lungs are the most common site of infection. We identified the factors associated with hospitalization for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in nonsplenectomized adults with ITP and established the ACPA prediction model to predict the incidence of hospitalization for CAP. This was a retrospective study of nonsplenectomized adult patients with ITP from 10 large medical centers in China. The derivation cohort included 145 ITP inpatients with CAP and 1360 inpatients without CAP from 5 medical centers, and the validation cohort included the remaining 63 ITP inpatients with CAP and 526 inpatients without CAP from the other 5 centers. The 4-item ACPA model, which included age, Charlson Comorbidity Index score, initial platelet count, and initial absolute lymphocyte count, was established by multivariable analysis of the derivation cohort. Internal and external validation were conducted to assess the performance of the model. The ACPA model had an area under the curve of 0.853 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.818-0.889) in the derivation cohort and 0.862 (95% CI, 0.807-0.916) in the validation cohort, which indicated the good discrimination power of the model. Calibration plots showed high agreement between the estimated and observed probabilities. Decision curve analysis indicated that ITP patients could benefit from the clinical application of the ACPA model. To summarize, the ACPA model was developed and validated to predict the occurrence of hospitalization for CAP, which might help identify ITP patients with a high risk of hospitalization for CAP.

Details

ISSN :
24739537 and 24739529
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4466f2342054f65e34147208033e1fd3