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Development and validation of the Durham Risk Score for estimating suicide attempt risk: A prospective cohort analysis.

Nathan A KimbrelJean C BeckhamPatrick S CalhounBryann B DeBeerTerence M KeaneDaniel J LeeBrian P MarxEric C MeyerSandra B MorrisetteEric B Elbogen
Published in: PLoS medicine (2021)
In this study, we observed that the DRS was a strong predictor of future suicide attempts in both the combined development (AUC = 0.91) and validation (AUC = 0.92) cohorts. It also demonstrated good utility in many important subgroups, including women, men, Black, White, Hispanic, veterans, lower-income individuals, younger adults, and LGBTQ individuals. We further observed that 82% of prospective suicide attempts occurred among individuals in the top 15% of DRS scores, whereas 27% occurred in the top 1%. Taken together, these findings suggest that the DRS represents a significant advancement in suicide risk prediction over traditional clinical assessment approaches. While more work is needed to independently validate the DRS in prospective studies and to identify the optimal methods to assess the constructs used to calculate the score, our findings suggest that the DRS is a promising new tool that has the potential to significantly enhance clinicians' ability to identify individuals at risk for attempting suicide in the future.
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