Back to Search Start Over

Predicting tibia shaft nonunions at initial fixation: An external validation of the Nonunion Risk Determination (NURD) score in the SPRINT trial data

Authors :
Robert V O'Toole
Mohit Bhandari
Gerard P. Slobogean
Renan C. Castillo
Nathan N O'Hara
Sheila Sprague
Kevin O'Halloran
Source :
Injury. 51:2302-2308
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Predictive models are common in orthopedic research; however, most models are not validated in an external population. The Nonunion Risk Determination (NURD) score was developed using a single-center cohort of 382 patients to reliably predict tibia shaft nonunions at the time of initial intramedullary nail fixation. The purpose of this study was to externally validate the NURD score using data from the SPRINT Trial.The SPRINT trial was a multicenter study comparing reamed versus unreamed intramedullary nails in tibial shaft fracture patients. We assessed the prognostic performance of the NURD score in the SPRINT trial data with comparisons of the c-statistics, calibration plots, and a comparison of predicted probabilities at cut-points defined in the study to derive the NURD score. In addition, we compared the odds ratios of the NURD score components between the derivation (NURD) and external validation (SPRINT) data.The NURD score demonstrated significantly worse discrimination in the SPRINT data than was observed in the original data (c-statistic: 0.61 vs. 0.85, p0.01). The NURD score was well-calibrated in the derivation and SPRINT data. The SPRINT data had less heterogeneity, as determined by the standard deviation of the linear predictors (NURD: 1.4 vs.0.4). Once we adjusted for case-mix differences, the NURD score had similarly strong discrimination in the SPRINT data (c-statistic: 0.81 vs. 0.85, p = 0.17).Based on our external validation, the NURD score lacks generalizability as it underperforms with respect to discrimination in the SPRINT trial data. However, after adjusting for case-mix differences, the performance of the NURD score is comparable between the two datasets, suggesting robust reproducibility.

Details

ISSN :
00201383
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Injury
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....75d94eb4e4cd21a742b509e3cd68b12a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2020.06.050