TeLePhone Respiratory (TeLePoR) score to assess the risk of immediate respiratory support through phone call for acute dyspnoea: a prospective cohort study

Abstract Background Acute dyspnea is a frequent cause to call the Emergency Medical Call Center (EMCC). The main challenge for EMCC dispatchers is to quickly identify patients that will require respiratory support in order to provide them with the most accurate prehospital response. Our main objecti...

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Main Authors: Frederic Balen, François Saget, Axel Benhamed, Oussama-Ibrahim Boudjemline, Lisa Girard, Elisa Lescanne, Pauline Mimouni, Paul-Georges Reuter, Sandrine Charpentier, Nicolas Marjanovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-05-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-025-01405-3
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Summary:Abstract Background Acute dyspnea is a frequent cause to call the Emergency Medical Call Center (EMCC). The main challenge for EMCC dispatchers is to quickly identify patients that will require respiratory support in order to provide them with the most accurate prehospital response. Our main objective was to derivate a score assessable during the first call to detect the most severe patients needing medical assistance. Methods This prospective observational cohort study was conducted in four different French EMCC from January 22nd to March 7th 2024. Patients over the age of 18 years old that called once the EMCC for acute dyspnea were included in our study. The primary endpoint was an immediate respiratory support requirement (i.e. high-flow oxygen, non-invasive ventilation or mechanical ventilation after intubation) before or at the Emergency Department Registration. Variables of interest to predict respiratory support were prospectively collected in each EMCC. A multivariate analysis by stepwise logistic regression was used to select variables associated with the primary endpoint and to create in the TeLePhon Respiratory Score (TeLePoR score). The TeLePoR score was compared to medical dispatcher intuition for predicting respiratory support. Results Six hundred and forty-nine patients were analyzed, including 49 (8%) that required immediate respiratory support. The risk factors included in the TeLePoR score were: altered ability to speak complete sentences (OR = 8.62; CI95% = [3.49–21.3]), abdominal respiration (OR = 2.42; CI95% = [1.23–4.76]), altered consciousness (OR = 2.05; CI95% = [0.90–4.65]) and self-report breathing discomfort > 7/10 (OR = 1.83; CI95% = [0.96–3.47]) respectively. Considering these factors, TeLePoR score presented a 0.810 AUC. Medical dispatcher intuition was not statistically superior to TelePoR score to predict immediate respiratory support (AUC = 0.836 vs. 0.810; p = 0.431). Conclusion TeLePoR score is a simple scoring system including 4 variables to predict immediate respiratory support in patients calling the EMCC for acute dyspnea.
ISSN:1757-7241