A new Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II) based on a European/North American multicenter study
J. R. Le Gall, S. Lemeshow and F. Saulnier
Faculty of Medicine Lariboisiere-Saint-Louis, Paris, France.
OBJECTIVE--To develop and validate a new Simplified Acute Physiology Score,
the SAPS II, from a large sample of surgical and medical patients, and to
provide a method to convert the score to a probability of hospital
mortality. DESIGN AND SETTING--The SAPS II and the probability of hospital
mortality were developed and validated using data from consecutive
admissions to 137 adult medical and/or surgical intensive care units in 12
countries. PATIENTS--The 13,152 patients were randomly divided into
developmental (65%) and validation (35%) samples. Patients younger than 18
years, burn patients, coronary care patients, and cardiac surgery patients
were excluded. OUTCOME MEASURE--Vital status at hospital discharge.
RESULTS--The SAPS II includes only 17 variables: 12 physiology variables,
age, type of admission (scheduled surgical, unscheduled surgical, or
medical), and three underlying disease variables (acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome, metastatic cancer, and hematologic malignancy). Goodness-of-fit
tests indicated that the model performed well in the developmental sample
and validated well in an independent sample of patients (P = .883 and P =
.104 in the developmental and validation samples, respectively). The area
under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.88 in the
developmental sample and 0.86 in the validation sample. CONCLUSION--The
SAPS II, based on a large international sample of patients, provides an
estimate of the risk of death without having to specify a primary
diagnosis. This is a starting point for future evaluation of the efficiency
of intensive care units.