PSI/PORT Score: Pneumonia Severity Index for CAP

PSI/PORT Score: Pneumonia Severity Index for CAP

Estimates mortality risk and need for hospitalization in community-acquired pneumonia

PSI/PORT Score: Pneumonia Severity Index for CAP

PSI/PORT Score: Pneumonia Severity Index for CAP

Estimates mortality risk and need for hospitalization in community-acquired pneumonia

Gender
Age
years
Nursing home resident
Neoplastic disease
Any active malignancy
Liver disease history
Congestive heart failure history
Cerebrovascular disease history
Renal disease history
Altered mental status
Respiratory rate ≥ 30 breaths/min
Systolic BP < 90 mmHg
Temperature <35°C or ≥40°C
Pulse ≥ 125 beats/min
Arterial pH < 7.35
BUN ≥ 30 mg/dL
Blood urea nitrogen
Sodium < 130 mmol/L
Glucose ≥ 250 mg/dL
Hematocrit < 30%
Partial pressure of oxygen <60 mmHg or <8 kPa
Pleural effusion on x-ray
PSI/PORT Score 0 Class I (very low risk; mortality 0.1%; outpatient)
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Instructions

Use standard clinical data. Enter demographics, comorbidities, exam findings, basic labs, and radiograph features. Confirm values are current and measured correctly. Calculate the total points and assign a risk class. Interpret results with clinical judgment and local pathways. Reassess if the patient’s condition changes.

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

Interpretation

Risk class

Typical points

Risk

I

Class I (by rule)

Low

II

≤70

Low

III

71–90

Low

IV

91–130

Moderate

V

≥131

High

 

Fine MJ, Auble TE, Yealy DM, et al. A prediction rule to identify low‑risk patients with community‑acquired pneumonia. N Engl J Med. 1997;336(4):243–250. Derivation (n=14,199) and validation (n=38,039) cohorts produced the 20‑variable Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) with 5 risk classes (I–V) predicting 30‑day mortality; identified large low‑risk groups suitable for outpatient care.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199701233360402

 

2019 ATS/IDSA CAP Guideline. Recommends using a validated prediction rule for mortality risk (PSI preferred over CURB‑65 to guide hospitalization), combined with clinical judgment and assessment of instability/contraindications to outpatient care.
https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1164/rccm.201908-1581ST

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

The Pneumonia Severity Index, also called the PORT score, stratifies risk in adults with community acquired pneumonia to support site-of-care decisions and counseling. It combines 20 routinely available variables that cover age, residence, comorbid illness, vital signs, mental status, and laboratory or radiographic findings. Each variable contributes a set number of points that sum to a total score. The total maps to five risk classes that correlate with short-term mortality. In the original multicenter derivation and validation by Fine and colleagues, the rule identified large groups of low-risk patients who were safe candidates for outpatient management with close follow up. Subsequent prospective comparisons have shown that PSI performs well for mortality prediction and often outperforms simpler rules when the goal is to identify patients at very low risk.

PSI is most helpful at the extremes. Classes I and II usually signal low mortality risk and potential for outpatient treatment when social factors and oxygenation are adequate. Classes IV and V indicate higher risk and support inpatient care with early reassessment for complications. Class III often requires brief observation, targeted testing, and individualized decisions. PSI does not replace clinical judgment. It should be paired with bedside evaluation, pulse oximetry, assessment of ability to safely take oral therapy, and awareness of special populations such as pregnant or severely immunocompromised patients where performance may differ.

Overview
When to use
Why use
Evidences

Interpretation

Risk class

Typical points

Risk

I

Class I (by rule)

Low

II

≤70

Low

III

71–90

Low

IV

91–130

Moderate

V

≥131

High

 

Fine MJ, Auble TE, Yealy DM, et al. A prediction rule to identify low‑risk patients with community‑acquired pneumonia. N Engl J Med. 1997;336(4):243–250. Derivation (n=14,199) and validation (n=38,039) cohorts produced the 20‑variable Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) with 5 risk classes (I–V) predicting 30‑day mortality; identified large low‑risk groups suitable for outpatient care.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199701233360402

 

2019 ATS/IDSA CAP Guideline. Recommends using a validated prediction rule for mortality risk (PSI preferred over CURB‑65 to guide hospitalization), combined with clinical judgment and assessment of instability/contraindications to outpatient care.
https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1164/rccm.201908-1581ST

Frequently Asked Questions

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What variables are included in PSI?+
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