Author
Listed:
- Maaike C. Swets
(University of Edinburgh
Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University)
- Steven Kerr
(University of Edinburgh
University of Edinburgh)
- James Scott-Brown
(University of Edinburgh)
- Adam B. Brown
(University of Edinburgh)
- Rishi Gupta
(Institute for Global Health, University College London)
- Jonathan E. Millar
(University of Edinburgh)
- Enti Spata
(Medical Research Council Population Health Research Unit at the University of Oxford, Nuffield Department of Population Health (NDPH))
- Fiona McCurrach
(Royal Infirmary Edinburgh)
- Andrew D. Bretherick
(University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital)
- Annemarie Docherty
(University of Edinburgh)
- David Harrison
(Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre)
- Kathy Rowan
(Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre)
- Neil Young
(Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh)
- Geert H. Groeneveld
(Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University)
- Jake Dunning
(University of Oxford)
- Jonathan S. Nguyen-Van-Tam
(University of Nottingham School of Medicine)
- Peter Openshaw
(Imperial College London)
- Peter W. Horby
(University of Oxford)
- Ewen Harrison
(University of Edinburgh)
- Natalie Staplin
(Medical Research Council Population Health Research Unit at the University of Oxford, Nuffield Department of Population Health (NDPH))
- Malcolm G. Semple
(University of Liverpool
Alder Hey Children’s Hospital)
- Nazir Lone
(University of Edinburgh
Little France Crescent)
- J. Kenneth Baillie
(University of Edinburgh
Little France Crescent
University of Edinburgh
University of Edinburgh)
Abstract
Choosing optimal outcome measures maximizes statistical power, accelerates discovery and improves reliability in early-phase trials. We devised and evaluated a modification to a pragmatic measure of oxygenation function, the $$S/F$$ S / F ratio. Because of the ceiling effect in oxyhaemoglobin saturation, $$S/F$$ S / F ratio ceases to reflect pulmonary oxygenation function at high $${S}_{p}{O}_{2}$$ S p O 2 values. We found that the correlation of $$S/F$$ S / F with the reference standard ( $${P}_{a}{O}_{2}$$ P a O 2 / $${F}_{I}{O}_{2}$$ F I O 2 ratio) improves substantially when excluding $${S}_{p}{O}_{2} > 0.94$$ S p O 2 > 0.94 and refer to this measure as $$S/{F}_{94}$$ S / F 94 . Using observational data from 39,765 hospitalised COVID-19 patients, we demonstrate that $$S/{F}_{94}$$ S / F 94 is predictive of mortality, and compare the sample sizes required for trials using four different outcome measures. We show that a significant difference in outcome could be detected with the smallest sample size using $$S/{F}_{94}$$ S / F 94 . We demonstrate that $$S/{F}_{94}$$ S / F 94 is an effective intermediate outcome measure in COVID-19. It is a non-invasive measurement, representative of disease severity and provides greater statistical power.
Suggested Citation
Maaike C. Swets & Steven Kerr & James Scott-Brown & Adam B. Brown & Rishi Gupta & Jonathan E. Millar & Enti Spata & Fiona McCurrach & Andrew D. Bretherick & Annemarie Docherty & David Harrison & Kathy, 2023.
"Evaluation of pragmatic oxygenation measurement as a proxy for Covid-19 severity,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-10, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:14:y:2023:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-023-42205-6
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42205-6
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