TY - JOUR T1 - Reply: External validation of the OPALS prediction model for in-hospital mortality in patients with acute decompensated pulmonary hypertension JF - ERJ Open Research JO - erjor DO - 10.1183/23120541.00066-2022 VL - 8 IS - 1 SP - 00066-2022 AU - Robin Condliffe AU - Kris Bauchmuller AU - Jennifer Southern AU - David G. Kiely AU - Gary H. Mills Y1 - 2022/01/01 UR - http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/8/1/00066-2022.abstract N2 - We were very interested to read the correspondence by M.V.F. Garcia and colleagues [1]. They have assessed our previously proposed predictive score for outcomes in medically decompensated pulmonary hypertension (PH) patients: the OPALS score (oxygen (oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry/inspiratory oxygen fraction ratio ⩽185), platelets ⩽196×109 L−1, age ⩾37.5 years, lactate ⩾2.45 mmol·L−1 and sodium ⩽130.5 mmol·L−1) in 74 PH patients. Discriminatory power was very similar to that observed in our derivation cohort (c-statistic of 0.77 versus 0.78) [2]. Furthermore, there was exceedingly high calibration between predicted and observed mortality in their validation cohort (R2=0.97). The OPALS score therefore appears to be a promising PH-specific tool for predicting outcomes in medically decompensated patients. Further work is, however, needed to compare its accuracy and utility compared with other intensive care unit (ICU) scoring systems and PH risk-stratification tools, and to assess its responsiveness to changing clinical severity during patients’ ICU admission.The OPALS score appears to be a promising PH-specific tool for predicting outcomes in medically decompensated patients https://bit.ly/3rTxzbr ER -