The predictive values of admission characteristics for 28-day all-cause mortality in septic patients with diabetes mellitus: a study from the MIMIC database

0Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Background: Septic patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are more venerable to subsequent complications and the resultant increase in associated mortality. Therefore, it is important to make tailored clinical decisions for this subpopulation at admission. Method: Data from large-scale real-world databases named the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care Database (MIMIC) were reviewed. The least absolute selection and shrinkage operator (LASSO) was performed with 10 times cross-validation methods to select the optimal prognostic factors. Multivariate COX regression analysis was conducted to identify the independent prognostic factors and nomogram construction. The nomogram was internally validated via the bootstrapping method and externally validated by the MIMIC III database with receiver operating characteristic (ROC), calibration curves, decision curve analysis (DCA), and Kaplan-Meier curves for robustness check. Results: A total of 3,291 septic patients with DM were included in this study, 2,227 in the MIMIC IV database and 1,064 in the MIMIC III database, respectively. In the training cohort, the 28-day all-cause mortality rate is 23.9% septic patients with DM. The multivariate Cox regression analysis reveals age (hazard ratio (HR)=1.023, 95%CI: 1.016-1.031, p<0.001), respiratory failure (HR=1.872, 95%CI: 1.554-2.254, p<0.001), Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (HR=1.056, 95%CI: 1.018-1.094, p=0.004); base excess (HR=0.980, 95%CI: 0.967-0.992, p=0.002), anion gap (HR=1.100, 95%CI: 1.080-1.120, p<0.001), albumin (HR=0.679, 95%CI: 0.574-0.802, p<0.001), international normalized ratio (HR=1.087, 95%CI: 1.027-1.150, p=0.004), red cell distribution width (HR=1.056, 95%CI: 1.021-1.092, p=0.001), temperature (HR=0.857, 95%CI: 0.789-0.932, p<0.001), and glycosylated hemoglobin (HR=1.358, 95%CI: 1.320-1.401, p<0.001) at admission are independent prognostic factors for 28-day all-cause mortality of septic patients with DM. The established nomogram shows satisfied accuracy and clinical utility with AUCs of 0.870 in the internal validation and 0.830 in the external validation cohort as well as 0.820 in the septic shock subpopulation, which is superior to the predictive value of the single SOFA score. Conclusion: Our results suggest that admission characteristics show an optimal prediction value for short-term mortality in septic patients with DM. The established model can support intensive care unit physicians in making better initial clinical decisions for this subpopulation.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Yang, C., Jiang, Y., Zhang, C., Min, Y., & Huang, X. (2023). The predictive values of admission characteristics for 28-day all-cause mortality in septic patients with diabetes mellitus: a study from the MIMIC database. Frontiers in Endocrinology, 14. https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1237866

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free