Researchers at Henan Cancer Hospital studied 417 cancer patients who had infections caused by carbapenem-resistant organisms (CROs). These are serious infections that are hard to treat with common antibiotics. The goal was to create a tool to predict which patients were at highest risk of dying within 30 days of their infection.
The study looked back at patient records to find patterns. They identified 14 factors linked to higher risk, including where the infection sample came from, whether the patient had recent radiotherapy, and certain blood test results. The prediction model they built performed well in their initial group of patients and in a smaller validation group.
It's important to know this was a single-hospital study that looked at past data. The model shows associations but doesn't prove that changing any of the 14 factors would actually change a patient's risk. The researchers themselves say the model needs to be tested in other hospitals and patient groups before doctors could confidently use it in practice. For now, this is a promising research tool that could one day help doctors identify high-risk patients earlier.