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To Admit or Not to Admit: Use CURB-65 to Decide


 

SAN FRANCISCO — A simple clinical rule known as the CURB-65 can be a big help in identifying those patients with community-acquired pneumonia who need to be hospitalized, Michael S. Niederman, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

Efforts have been made to develop a clinical checklist that can be used to help decide whether a pneumonia patient should be admitted to the hospital. But most of them are complex, and the most frequently used—the Pneumonia Severity Index—was designed to predict mortality, not the need for hospitalization.

The CURB-65, on the other hand, is convenient, and was designed specifically to assess need for hospitalization, said Dr. Niederman, chairman of the department of medicine at Winthrop-University Hospital, Mineola, N.Y.

CURB-65—which stands for confusion, urea, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and 65 years of age or older—uses five criteria, to be applied to a patient with a fever less than 37° C and an albumin level less than 30 g/dL. The criteria are confusion, BUN greater than 7 mmol/L, respiratory rate of at least 30 breaths per minute, systolic blood pressure less than 90 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure less than or equal to 60 mm Hg, and age of 65 years or older.

One point is given for each criterion present. A score of 0–1 indicates the patient has a low risk of death and could be sent home, provided there are no complicating factors. A score of 2 indicates the patient has about a 10% risk of death and should be considered seriously for hospital admission. A score of 3 or higher indicates a 20% or higher risk of death; the patient should be admitted, probably to the ICU.

“I like this rule,” Dr. Niederman said. “It is not 100%,” he noted, but “I can access all these criteria and very quickly know what I want to do with a patient.”

The CURB-65 rule does not replace clinical judgment, he said. But “it is, in my mind, a reality check that I use on every pneumonia patient,” he explained.

“The one caveat I have is that if you are going to use this [rule], count the respiratory rate yourself,” Dr. Niederman added.

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