%0 Journal Article %A Berenguer, Juan %A Borobia, Alberto M %A Ryan, Pablo %A Rodríguez-Baño, Jesús %A Bellón, Jose M %A Jarrín, Inmaculada %A Carratalà, Jordi %A Pachón, Jerónimo %A Carcas, Antonio J %A Yllescas, María %A Arribas, José R %A COVID-19@Spain and COVID@HULP Study Groups %T Development and validation of a prediction model for 30-day mortality in hospitalised patients with COVID-19: the COVID-19 SEIMC score. %D 2021 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10668/17238 %X To develop and validate a prediction model of mortality in patients with COVID-19 attending hospital emergency rooms. Multivariable prognostic prediction model. 127 Spanish hospitals. Derivation (DC) and external validation (VC) cohorts were obtained from multicentre and single-centre databases, including 4035 and 2126 patients with confirmed COVID-19, respectively. Prognostic variables were identified using multivariable logistic regression. 30-day mortality. Patients' characteristics in the DC and VC were median age 70 and 61 years, male sex 61.0% and 47.9%, median time from onset of symptoms to admission 5 and 8 days, and 30-day mortality 26.6% and 15.5%, respectively. Age, low age-adjusted saturation of oxygen, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, estimated glomerular filtration rate by the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation, dyspnoea and sex were the strongest predictors of mortality. Calibration and discrimination were satisfactory with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve with a 95% CI for prediction of 30-day mortality of 0.822 (0.806-0.837) in the DC and 0.845 (0.819-0.870) in the VC. A simplified score system ranging from 0 to 30 to predict 30-day mortality was also developed. The risk was considered to be low with 0-2 points (0%-2.1%), moderate with 3-5 (4.7%-6.3%), high with 6-8 (10.6%-19.5%) and very high with 9-30 (27.7%-100%). A simple prediction score, based on readily available clinical and laboratory data, provides a useful tool to predict 30-day mortality probability with a high degree of accuracy among hospitalised patients with COVID-19. %K clinical epidemiology %K critical care %K emergency medicine %K pneumonia %K respiratory infection %K viral infection %~