Cell Reports Medicine
Volume 2, Issue 9, 21 September 2021, 100376
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Report
Performance of crisis standards of care guidelines in a cohort of critically ill COVID-19 patients in the United States

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xcrm.2021.100376Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Crisis standards of care (CSC) guidelines have poor prediction of 28-day mortality

  • Consideration of comorbidities modestly improves guideline performance

  • Simulation of clinical decision-making shows frequent ties in priority scores

  • Using comorbidities in CSC has the potential to exacerbate racial inequities

Summary

Many US states published crisis standards of care (CSC) guidelines for allocating scarce critical care resources during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the performance of these guidelines in maximizing their population benefit has not been well tested. In 2,272 adults with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation drawn from the Study of the Treatment and Outcomes in Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19 (STOP-COVID) multicenter cohort, we test the following three approaches to CSC algorithms: Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores grouped into ranges, SOFA score ranges plus comorbidities, and a hypothetical approach using raw SOFA scores not grouped into ranges. We find that area under receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curves for all three algorithms demonstrate only modest discrimination for 28-day mortality. Adding comorbidity scoring modestly improves algorithm performance over SOFA scores alone. The algorithm incorporating comorbidities has modestly worse predictive performance for Black compared to white patients. CSC algorithms should be empirically examined to refine approaches to the allocation of scarce resources during pandemics and to avoid potential exacerbation of racial inequities.

Keywords

medical ethics
crisis standards of care
triage
critical care
intensive care
COVID-19
acute respiratory distress syndrome
ARDS

Data and code availability

Patient data reviewed in this study are not publicly available due to restrictions on patient privacy and data sharing. Individual, patient level data are not currently available because there are individual data use agreements with each of the 67 participating STOP-COVID institutions that do not permit sharing of individual patient data with outside entities. Summary data from STOP-COVID are publicly available in the prior publications, such as Gupta et al.1

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14

These authors contributed equally

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These authors contributed equally

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