AbstractBackground A methodology for predicting pediatric cardiac catheterization-related complications can assist interventionists in planning treatment strategies, obtaining informed consent, and allocating medical resources. We aimed to perform an external validation of the Catheterization Risk Score for Pediatrics (CRISP). Methods We retrospectively reviewed 3093 consecutive catheterizations performed between January 2016 and March 2021 to calculate the CRISP. Model performance was assessed using discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve AUC) and calibration (observed and predicted risk). Results Serious adverse events (SAE) occurred in 200 procedures (6.5%, 208 events). The most frequent complication was arterial occlusive thrombosis at the access site (1.8%). Nine catheterization-related deaths were identified. The mean CRISP score was 5.74 ± 3.43. SAE incidence increased across categories, ranging from 1.5% in category 1 to 36.4% in category 5. The CRISP score and categories demonstrated good discriminative power (AUC, 0.729; 95% CI, 0.695-0.764; AUC, 0.717, 95% CI, 0.682-0.752). Conclusions The CRISP scoring method demonstrated good predictive performance in identifying SAE. This external validation supports procedural planning and may improve communication with patients and families, thereby enhancing safety and quality of care.
Kurita et al. (Sun,) studied this question.