4.4 Article

Predictive validity of the Chelsea Critical Care Physical Assessment tool (CPAx) in critically ill, mechanically ventilated adults: a prospective clinimetric study

Journal

DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages 111-116

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2021.2022785

Keywords

Physiotherapy; rehabilitation; critical illness; predictive value of tests; patient outcome assessment; critical care outcomes; measurement instrument; physical function

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This study investigated the predictive validity of the CPAx tool in critically ill adults at ICU discharge for their 90-day outcomes. The results showed that the CPAx had good accuracy in predicting a return to home within 90 days, but was not associated with subsequent health-related quality of life.
Purpose To investigate the predictive validity of the Chelsea Critical Care Physical Assessment tool (CPAx) at intensive care unit (ICU) discharge in critically ill adults for their 90-day outcomes. Materials and methods This prospective clinimetric study investigated four theory-driven, a-priori hypotheses in critically ill adults recruited within 72-144 h of mechanical ventilation. The primary hypothesis was a moderate accuracy (AUROC = 0.750) in predicting residence at home within 90 days. Secondary hypotheses included discrimination between hospital discharge destinations, correlation with subsequent health-related quality of life and length of ICU stay. Results We observed a good accuracy (AUROC = 0.778) of the CPAx at ICU discharge in predicting a return to home within 90 days. The CPAx score significantly increased between the discharge groups undesirable <= rehabilitation <= home (p < 0.001), but was not associated with 90-day health-related quality of life (physical: r = 0.261, mental: r = 0.193). Measured at baseline, CPAx scores correlated as expected with length of ICU stay (r = -0.443). Conclusions The CPAx at ICU discharge had a good predictive validity in projecting residence at home within 90 days and general discharge destinations. The CPAx might therefore have clinical value in prediction, though it does not seem useful to predict subsequent health-related quality of life.

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