C. Hartley et al., THE APACHE-II SCORING SYSTEM IN NEUROSURGICAL PATIENTS - A COMPARISONWITH SIMPLE GLASGOW COMA SCORING, British journal of neurosurgery, 9(2), 1995, pp. 179-187
In order to compare the predictive value of the Apache II, the Glasgow
Coma Scale and Revised Trauma Scoring systems in relation to outcome
in a neurosurgical department high dependency unit (HDU), all 109 pati
ents entering the unit under the care of one consultant were studied.
All patients in the HDU were self-ventilating, so that motor responses
were not suppressed by muscle relaxants or sedation. Initial Minimum
and Maximum Glasgow Coma Scale Scores, Revised Trauma Score, Apache II
and the Apache minus neurological weighting (Apache-NW) scores, were
compared as predictors of outcome (as assessed by the Glasgow Outcome
Score at 6 months). Twenty-eight patients had a bad outcome, i.e. Glas
gow Outcome Scores 1-3, and 72 individuals a good outcome, i.e. scores
4 or 5. Statistical analysis was by the Spearman Ranked Correlation T
est, and comparison of Receiver Operational Characteristics Curves. Da
ta were complete on 100 patients (91.7%) and show the Maximum Glasgow
Coma Score, followed by the Apache II score, as the best predictors of
outcome analysed. This was also true if all patients except those wit
h head injury were analysed as a group. All scoring systems were signi
ficantly better predictors of outcome in the head injured patient. For
this group, Apache II had an outcome predictive value of 97%, compare
d with 93% for initial and 95% for minimum GCS. Removing the neurologi
cal weighting from Apache II weakened its predictive ability in all pa
tients, emphasizing that it is the neurological status of the patient
which best predicts overall functional outcome. Apache II data are als
o much more time-consuming to collect than GCS data. There is no suppo
rt for the use of the Apache II scoring system in HDU neurosurgical pa
tients.