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  3. Rationale and Methodological Approach Underlying the Development of the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA)-2 Score: A Consensus Statement.
 

Rationale and Methodological Approach Underlying the Development of the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA)-2 Score: A Consensus Statement.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/92330
Publisher DOI
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.45040
PubMed ID
41159829
Description
Importance
The Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score was published in 1996 to describe organ dysfunction in critically ill adult patients in a readily quantifiable and sequential manner. Considerable changes have occurred over the last 3 decades in the use of organ support drugs and devices and in patient outcomes, necessitating revision of the score.Objectives
To develop definitions of organ dysfunction that reflect current understanding and to identify representative variables to generate a revised SOFA score (SOFA-2) of individual organ dysfunction.Evidence Review
A task force of experts in intensive care medicine and epidemiology generated definitions of organ dysfunction, identified relevant variables (physiological and laboratory data specific to the organ system, pharmacological and mechanical organ support), and proposed a 0 to 4-point grading of dysfunction severity through meetings, Delphi processes, and explicit rules, informed by data synthesis, including systematic reviews and meta-analysis. Variables were tested in 2 validation exercises using separate datasets totaling 3.34 million patients within 10 representative databases from diverse geographical and socioeconomic settings to assess distribution and predictive validity (mortality at intensive care unit discharge).Findings
A total of 60 experts participated, with 18 (30%) female participants. Overall, 65 countries were represented, with 33 (51%) from Europe and Central Asia, 13 (20%) from North America; and 8 (12%) from Latin America and the Caribbean. The physiological variables within the 6 organ systems used in the original SOFA score were retained, although some categories were renamed (ie, central nervous system was changed to brain, renal to kidney, coagulation to hemostasis, and hepatic to liver). Revisions of organ support drug and device variables were made to reflect current practice. Alternative variables were added for instances when laboratory data and/or organ support interventions would be inaccessible (eg, in some low-resource settings) or not indicated (eg, ceiling of treatment). Some point cutoff thresholds were modified based on evidence from systematic reviews and data analyses. Scores could not be developed for 2 additional organ systems (gastrointestinal and immune) due to insufficient data, complexity, or lack of content and predictive validity for the variables assessed. Explicit rules were developed to facilitate scoring consistency.Conclusions And Relevance
Through a methodologically robust development process, the SOFA-2 score offers updated definitions to describe organ dysfunction in adult patients requiring critical care and readily quantifiable criteria to grade the degree of dysfunction in individual organ systems. This score considers contemporaneous changes in patient management and outcomes.
Date of Publication
2025-10-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Moreno, Rui
Rhodes, Andrew
Ranzani, Otavio
Salluh, Jorge I F
Berger-Estilita, Joana
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Forschung / Evaluation (FE)
Institute for Medical Education
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation, Forschung / Evaluation
Coopersmith, Craig M
Juffermans, Nicole P
Laffey, John
Reinikainen, Matti
Neto, Ary Serpa
Tavares, Miguel
Timsit, Jean-François
Arias Lopez, Maria Del Pilar
Arulkumaran, Nish
Azoulay, Elie
Chaudhuri, Dipayan
De Lange, Dylan
De Waele, Jan
Dos Santos, Claudia C
Du, Bin
Einav, Sharon
Ferrer, Ricard
Fujii, Tomoko
Gershengorn, Hayley B
Haniffa, Rashan
Hasan, Mohd Shahnaz
Hollenberg, Steve
Ippolito, Mariachiara
Jung, Christian
Kirov, Mikhail
Lakbar, Inès
Lipman, Jeffrey
Liu, Vincent
Lobo, Suzana Margareth
Martin, Greg S
Metnitz, Philipp
Myatra, Sheila N
Oczkowski, Simon
Paiva, José-Artur
Paruk, Fathima
Pekkarinen, Pirkka T
Pilcher, David
Piquilloud, Lise
Pölkki, Anssi
Prescott, Halle C
Blaser, Annika Reintam
Rezende, Ederlon
Robba, Chiara
Rochwerg, Bram
Schenck, Edward J
Sendagire, Cornelius
Siaw-Frimpong, Moses
Simpkin, Andrew J
Soares, Márcio
Summers, Charlotte
Szczeklik, Wojciech
Takala, Jukka
Vincent, Jean-Louis
Wendon, Julia
Zampieri, Fernando G
Shankar-Hari, Manu
Singer, Mervyn
Additional Credits
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Forschung / Evaluation (FE)
Series
Jama Network Open
Publisher
American Medical Association
ISSN
2574-3805
Access(Rights)
open.access
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