VALIDATED CLINICAL TOOL

CURB-65 Calculator

Community-Acquired Pneumonia Severity & Admission Guide

📖
Deep Dive Article
CURB-65 Score: Pneumonia Severity, Antibiotics & When to Admit
Full guide — mortality tables, CRB-65 for primary care, antibiotic selection by severity, Klebsiella in Indian patients, and ICU criteria.
Read Article →

Select All That Apply (1 point each)

Confusion

New disorientation in person, place, or time (AMT ≤8)

Urea > 7 mmol/L

Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) > 19 mg/dL

Respiratory Rate ≥ 30 /min

Tachypnoea is a marker of respiratory compromise

Blood Pressure Low

Systolic < 90 mmHg or Diastolic ≤ 60 mmHg

Age ≥ 65 Years

Advanced age independently increases mortality risk

CURB-65 Score
30-Day Mortality

CURB-65 Score Interpretation Table

ScoreGroup30-Day MortalityRecommended Action
0Group 10.7%Home treatment likely appropriate
1Group 12.1%Home treatment; reassess if no improvement in 48h
2Group 26.6%Consider hospitalization or supervised outpatient care
3Group 317.0%Urgent inpatient admission; treat as severe CAP
4–5Group 3≈40%Emergency admission; consider ICU assessment
BTS Guidelines Lim et al. 2003 Validated in CAP

CURB-65 in the Indian Clinical Context

Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is among the leading causes of hospitalisation and mortality in India. The disease burden is compounded by several factors unique to the Indian setting — high prevalence of Klebsiella pneumoniae (a gram-negative organism not covered by standard beta-lactam monotherapy), drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, rising rates of TB-associated lung disease, and large numbers of immunocompromised patients on steroid therapy or with uncontrolled diabetes.

Pathogens in Indian CAP — What's Different

Unlike Western populations where S. pneumoniae dominates, Indian studies (including data from PGIMER, AIIMS, and CMC Vellore) consistently show a higher proportion of gram-negative organisms — particularly Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter spp., and Pseudomonas aeruginosa — especially in diabetic patients and those with prior antibiotic exposure. This has important implications: standard amoxicillin monotherapy is inadequate for moderate-to-severe Indian CAP; a combination of a beta-lactam plus a respiratory fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin or moxifloxacin) or a macrolide is preferred.

TB vs. CAP — A Critical Distinction

In India, pulmonary tuberculosis must always be considered in the differential for any patient presenting with cough, fever, and infiltrates — particularly if symptoms have been present for more than 2 weeks, if the patient has had prior TB or TB contact, or if there is significant weight loss. CURB-65 does not distinguish TB from bacterial CAP. A patient with smear-positive TB may score 0–1 and be sent home — only to deteriorate and remain infectious. Always obtain sputum AFB smear and GeneXpert if TB is suspected.

Empirical Antibiotic Therapy — India Guidance

CURB-65SettingPreferred Regimen (India)
0–1 Outpatient Amoxicillin-clavulanate 625mg TDS or Azithromycin 500mg OD × 5 days
2 Ward admission IV Ampicillin-sulbactam + Azithromycin or Levofloxacin 750mg OD
3–4 Ward / HDU IV Piperacillin-tazobactam + Levofloxacin; consider coverage for Klebsiella
5 ICU Meropenem + Levofloxacin ± anti-MRSA (vancomycin) if risk factors present

Antibiotic choices should be guided by local antibiogram data and modified based on culture results. These are empirical starting points only.

What is the CURB-65 Score?

The CURB-65 score is a validated clinical prediction rule developed by Lim et al. in 2003 and endorsed by the British Thoracic Society (BTS) for stratifying the severity of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). It uses five easily obtainable bedside and laboratory parameters to estimate 30-day all-cause mortality and guide the decision between outpatient, inpatient, and intensive care management.

Each parameter present is assigned 1 point. A total score ranges from 0 to 5. The score was derived from a cohort of over 1,000 patients across multiple UK hospitals and has since been externally validated in numerous international populations, including studies from India and Southeast Asia.

When to Use CURB-65

CURB-65 is best applied in emergency departments and inpatient wards where blood urea/BUN results are readily available. For primary care or community settings without lab access, the abbreviated CRB-65 (dropping the Urea parameter) is recommended as a practical alternative. Always interpret the score alongside clinical judgment, oxygenation status, radiology findings, and social circumstances.

Antibiotic Guidance by Severity

The IDSA/ATS guidelines recommend oral amoxicillin-clavulanate or respiratory fluoroquinolones for mild CAP (score 0–1), and IV beta-lactam plus a macrolide for moderate-severe CAP (score ≥2). For ICU-level patients, dual coverage with a beta-lactam plus either a macrolide or fluoroquinolone is standard. Atypical coverage (Legionella, Mycoplasma) should be considered in all hospitalized CAP patients.

Limitations to Be Aware Of

Frequently Asked Questions

What does CURB-65 stand for?

CURB-65 is an acronym: C = Confusion, U = Urea >7 mmol/L, R = Respiratory Rate ≥30/min, B = low Blood Pressure, and 65 = Age ≥65 years. Each criterion present adds 1 point to the total score.

What is the difference between CURB-65 and CRB-65?

CRB-65 omits the blood urea parameter, making it usable when laboratory results aren't available — primarily in GP or primary care settings. CURB-65 has superior predictive accuracy and is preferred in hospitals where a blood urea or BUN result can be obtained quickly.

What CURB-65 score needs ICU admission?

A score of 4 or 5 carries a 30-day mortality approaching 40% and should trigger an urgent ICU assessment in addition to inpatient admission. A score of 3 also warrants hospital admission and management as severe pneumonia, with a lower threshold for ICU referral if the patient deteriorates.

Can CURB-65 be used for COVID-19 pneumonia?

CURB-65 was not validated for viral or COVID-19 pneumonia. It can provide a rough severity estimate, but dedicated scores such as the 4C Mortality Score or WHO severity classification are more appropriate for SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia assessment.

👨‍⚕️
Reviewed by Dr. Sharma, MBBS, AFIH
Medical Officer, Government AAC, Punjab, India. Previously at Hero DMC Heart Institute and Fortis Hospital, Ludhiana. This tool follows British Thoracic Society (BTS) 2009 CAP Guidelines and IDSA/ATS 2007 Consensus Statement.
Related Tools