Prognostic scores in status epilepticus—a critical appraisal

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Abstract

Currently, there are 4 published scales evaluating status epilepticus (SE) prognosis: the Status Epilepticus Severity Score (STESS), the Epidemiology-based Mortality score in Status Epilepticus (EMSE), the modified STESS (mSTESS), and the Encephalitis Nonconvulsive Status Epilepticus Diazepam Resistence Imaging Tracheal Intubation (END-IT) score. The first prognostic score published for SE, the STESS, is a simple and practical scale that evaluates patient prognosis upon admission and is used widely to predict the outcome and stratify patients. Another scale, which was developed based on large epidemiologic studies, the EMSE, is more easily adapted to different regions around the world when assessing individual risk and stratifying patients in interventional studies. The mSTESS was created by adding the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) to the STESS, which decreases the ceiling effect and increases the mortality prediction capabilities of the STESS. The END-IT is the only prognostic scale assessing functional outcome and is comprehensively simple and satisfyingly accurate. Evaluating the limitations of each of these scales aids in the exploration and advancement of SE prognostic scales, thereby facilitating better clinical interventions and scientific research.

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Yuan, F., Gao, Q., & Jiang, W. (2018). Prognostic scores in status epilepticus—a critical appraisal. Epilepsia, 59, 170–175. https://doi.org/10.1111/epi.14483

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