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

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
du Fay de Lavallaz Jeanne, Badertscher Patrick, Nestelberger Thomas, Isenrich Rahel, Miró Òscar, Salgado Emilio, Geigy Nicolas, Christ Michael, Cullen Louise, Than Martin, Martin-Sanchez F. Javier, Bustamante Mandrión José, Di Somma Salvatore, Peacock W. Frank, Kawecki Damian, Boeddinghaus Jasper, Twerenbold Raphael, Puelacher Christian, Wussler Desiree, Strebel Ivo, Keller Dagmar I., Poepping Imke, Kühne Michael, Mueller Christian, Reichlin Tobias, Giménez Maria Rubini, Walter Joan, Kozhuharov Nikola, Shrestha Samyut, Mueller Deborah, Sazgary Lorraine, Morawiec Beata, Muzyk Piotr, Nowalany-Kozielska Ewa, Freese Michael, Stelzig Claudia, Meissner Kathrin, Kulangara Caroline, Hartmann Beate, Ferel Ina, Sabti Zaid, Greenslade Jaimi, Hawkins Tracey, Rentsch Katharina, von Eckardstein Arnold, Buser Andreas, Kloos Wanda, Lohrmann Jens, Osswald Stefan
ISSN: 0167-5273

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

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