Background
Few studies have focused on risk stratification for premature death after transplantation. However, stratification of individual risk is an essential step in personalized care.
Material and methods
We have developed a risk score of early post‐transplant death (ORLY score) in a prospective multicentre cohort including 942 patients and validated our model in a retrospective independent replication cohort including 874 patients.
Results
60 patients (6.4%) from the prospective cohort died during the first three‐year post‐transplant. Age, male gender, diabetes, dialysis duration and chronic respiratory failure were associated with early post‐transplant death. The multivariable model exhibited good discrimination ability (C‐index = 0.78, 95%CI [0.75‐0.81]). ORLY score highly predicted early death after transplantation (1.34; 95%CI, 1.22 to 1.48 for each increase of 1 point in score; P < .001). The predictive value of the score in the validation cohort was close to that observed in the experimental cohort (1.41; 95%CI, 1.27 to 1.56 for each increase of 1 point in score; P < .001). Merging the two cohorts, four categories of risk could be individualized: low, 0‐5 (n = 522, mean risk, 1%); intermediate, 6‐7 (n = 739, mean risk 4.7%); moderate, 8‐10 (n = 429, mean risk 10%); and high risk 11‐15 (n = 132, mean risk 19%).
Conclusions
The ORLY score discriminates patients with high risk of early death.