CURB-65 Pneumonia Severity Calculator

CURB-65 score for community-acquired pneumonia severity (0–5).

For educational and clinical reference. Not a substitute for medical judgment. See the medical disclaimer.
Score
Interpretation

References

  1. Lim WS, van der Eerden MM, Laing R, et al. Defining community acquired pneumonia severity on presentation to hospital: an international derivation and validation study. Thorax. 2003;58(5):377-382.

What is CURB-65 Pneumonia Severity?

The CURB-65 score is a clinical prediction rule for assessing 30-day mortality risk and guiding admission decisions in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Derived by Lim et al. in 2003 from the British Thoracic Society pneumonia cohort, it awards one point each for Confusion, Urea >7 mmol/L (BUN >19 mg/dL), Respiratory rate ≥30, Blood pressure (systolic <90 or diastolic ≤60), and age ≥65. Scores 0–1 predict low mortality (~1.5%) and support outpatient treatment, 2 suggests short-stay or supervised admission, and ≥3 indicates severe pneumonia (mortality ≥22%) requiring inpatient or ICU care.

How to use

  1. Check each of the 5 criteria.
  2. The score (0–5) and disposition guidance update instantly.
  3. For full risk stratification consider PSI or NEWS-2 alongside.

Frequently asked questions

What is CURB-65?

Confusion, Urea, Respiratory rate, Blood pressure, age ≥ 65 — a 5-point bedside score for severity of community-acquired pneumonia.

CURB-65 vs PSI?

PSI (Pneumonia Severity Index) is more accurate but requires 20 variables. CURB-65 is simpler and a reasonable first pass at the bedside.

When should a patient be admitted?

CURB-65 = 0–1 generally outpatient; = 2 short admission or supervised outpatient therapy; ≥ 3 hospital admission; 4–5 strongly consider ICU.

Is CRB-65 also valid?

Yes — CRB-65 (no urea) is useful when labs are not immediately available, often in primary care. Same thresholds apply.

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