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- Lynne Moore, André Lavoie, Stéphanie Camden, Nathalie Le Sage, John S Sampalis, Eric Bergeron, and Belkacem Abdous.
- Centre hospitalier affilié universitaire de Québec, Enfant-Jésus Hospital, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. lynne.moore@cha.quebec.qc.ca
- J Trauma. 2006 Jun 1;60(6):1238-43; discussion 1243-4.
BackgroundTo validate the predictive value of the Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) and find the best way to model the score in a logistic regression model predicting mortality.MethodsAnalyses were based on 20,494 patients from the trauma registries of three urban Level I trauma centers in the province of Quebec, Canada. The predictive value of the GCS and its components was evaluated in logistic regression models predicting in-hospital mortality with measures of discrimination and calibration. The performance of the GCS with no transformation and as an ordered categorical variable was compared with two transformation techniques: fractional polynomials and spline regression.ResultsThe GCS had excellent discrimination (area under Receiving Operator Characteristic Curve=0.833 95% confidence interval=0.820-0.846) but fairly poor calibration (Pearson's Chi-squared statistic=122 on 11 df). The eye component added no predictive information to the verbal and motor components in the whole sample but was important in certain sub-populations. Using the three components separately, rather than the sum, did not improve the predictive model. Fractional polynomial transformation of the GCS improved calibration and spline regression performed even better. GCS modeled as an ordered categorical variable performed badly both in terms of discrimination and calibration.ConclusionsThe GCS in its present form is an efficient predictor of in-hospital mortality, which could benefit from statistical transformation in logistic regression models when the accuracy of estimated probabilities of mortality is important. The common use of GCS categories for modeling mortality leads to loss of information and should be discarded.
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