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Medical scoring system From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CURB-65, also known as the CURB criteria, is a clinical prediction rule that has been validated for predicting mortality in community-acquired pneumonia[1] and infection of any site.[2] The CURB-65 is based on the earlier CURB score[3] and is recommended by the British Thoracic Society for the assessment of severity of pneumonia.[4] It was developed in 2002 at the University of Nottingham by Dr. W.S. Lim et al.[1] In 2018 a new toolkit was presented on the basis of CURB-65.[5]
CURB-65 | |
---|---|
Symptom | Points |
Confusion | 1 |
BUN>7 mmol/L (19 mg/dL) | 1 |
Respiratory rate≥30 | 1 |
BP: S<90mmHg, D≤60mmHg | 1 |
Age≥65 | 1 |
The score is an acronym for each of the risk factors measured. Each risk factor scores one point, for a maximum score of 5:
The risk of death at 30 days increases as the score increases:[1]
The CURB-65 has been compared to the pneumonia severity index in predicting mortality from pneumonia.[6] It was shown that the PSI has a higher discriminatory power for short-term mortality, and thus is more accurate for low risk patients than the CURB-65 or its predecessor, the CURB score.[3] However, the PSI is more complicated and requires arterial blood gas sampling amongst other tests; given this, the CURB-65 score is more easily used in primary care settings.[7] A variant of the CURB-65 that omits the urea measurement (CRB-65)[7] is even simpler, as it relies only on history and examination findings rather than blood tests.
The CURB-65 is used as a means of deciding the action that is needed to be taken for that patient.[citation needed]
Patients with any type of infection (half of the patients had pneumonia), the risk of death increases as the score increases:[2]
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