
A-DROP Pneumonia Severity Score Calculator
Calculate the A-DROP score for community-acquired pneumonia severity assessment. Select each criterion present to generate a Japanese Respiratory Society severity classification, estimated 30-day mortality, and evidence-based management recommendation for outpatient, hospital, or ICU care.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making any medical decisions. The results from this calculator should be used as a reference guide only and not as the sole basis for clinical decisions.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making any medical decisions. The results from this calculator should be used as a reference guide only and not as the sole basis for clinical decisions.
About This A-DROP Score Calculator
This A-DROP pneumonia severity score calculator is designed for clinicians, medical students, nurses, and healthcare professionals assessing adults with suspected community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). It calculates the five-parameter A-DROP score – Age, Dehydration (BUN), Respiratory failure (SpO2 or PaO2), Orientation disturbance, and blood Pressure – to produce a total score from 0 to 5 with immediate severity classification into mild, moderate, severe, or extremely severe categories.
The calculator applies the Japanese Respiratory Society (JRS) 2006 A-DROP scoring system, which uses sex-specific age thresholds (male 70 years, female 75 years), a BUN threshold of 21 mg/dL, an SpO2 cutpoint of 90%, and a systolic blood pressure threshold of 90 mmHg. Each criterion panel cycles through three states – unassessed, present, and absent – allowing flexible real-time scoring. Validation studies across multiple patient cohorts report AUC values around 0.83-0.85 for 30-day mortality prediction, comparable to the CURB-65 score.
The visual risk spectrum bar highlights the patient’s position across the four severity zones, while the summary panel displays the score, severity category, estimated 30-day mortality, and JRS guideline-based site-of-care recommendation. The calculator supports outpatient versus hospitalization versus ICU triage decisions in emergency, primary care, and inpatient settings globally.
A-DROP Score Calculator: Pneumonia Severity Assessment for Community-Acquired Pneumonia
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) remains one of the most common and potentially life-threatening infectious diseases worldwide, responsible for millions of hospitalizations annually. Accurate severity assessment at the point of initial presentation is critical - it determines whether a patient can be safely managed at home, requires hospital admission, or needs intensive care unit (ICU) level support. The A-DROP scoring system offers clinicians a rapid, validated, and clinically actionable method to stratify pneumonia severity using just five readily available parameters.
Developed by the Japanese Respiratory Society (JRS) and introduced in the 2006 JRS guidelines for community-acquired pneumonia management, A-DROP stands for Age, Dehydration, Respiratory failure, Orientation disturbance, and blood Pressure. It is a modified and refined version of the widely used British Thoracic Society CURB-65 score, adapted to better reflect the clinical characteristics of pneumonia in aging populations. Each of the five criteria contributes one point to the total score, yielding a range of 0 to 5 that maps directly onto four severity categories with corresponding management recommendations.
This calculator and guide provides clinicians, medical students, nurses, and healthcare professionals with a practical tool and comprehensive reference for applying the A-DROP score correctly and interpreting results in the context of current evidence-based pneumonia management.
D – Dehydration: BUN 21 mg/dL or higher (210 mg/L), or clinical dehydration = 1 point
R – Respiratory failure: SpO2 90% or lower, or PaO2 60 mmHg or lower = 1 point
O – Orientation disturbance: Confusion or altered mental status = 1 point
P – (blood) Pressure: Systolic blood pressure 90 mmHg or lower = 1 point
Background: Why Pneumonia Severity Scoring Matters
Pneumonia is a leading cause of infectious disease-related morbidity and mortality globally. In clinical practice, the initial challenge is determining where and how intensively to treat each patient. Under-triaging a severely ill patient to outpatient management risks death; over-triaging a mild case to hospital admission wastes resources and exposes low-risk patients to nosocomial complications including healthcare-associated infections.
Several severity scoring systems have been developed and validated for this purpose. The Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI), also known as the PORT score, was introduced in 1997 and consists of 20 variables including demographic, comorbidity, physical examination, and laboratory findings. While highly accurate, PSI's complexity makes it impractical in many real-world emergency settings. The CURB-65 score, proposed in 2003 by the British Thoracic Society, simplified severity scoring to five easily collected parameters: Confusion, Urea (BUN greater than 7 mmol/L), Respiratory rate (30 or more breaths per minute), Blood pressure (systolic below 90 mmHg or diastolic 60 mmHg or below), and age 65 or older.
The A-DROP score was developed as a Japanese adaptation of CURB-65, recognizing that the average age of CAP patients in Japan and many other countries with aging populations tends to be higher than in Western validation cohorts. By adjusting the age threshold to reflect sex-specific differences in life expectancy and frailty - and replacing the respiratory rate criterion (which requires physical examination) with an objective oxygen saturation threshold - A-DROP maintains simplicity while arguably offering better clinical relevance in settings where pulse oximetry is readily available.
The Five A-DROP Criteria Explained
A - Age
Age is an established independent predictor of pneumonia mortality. The biological rationale is clear: older adults have reduced immune reserve, diminished respiratory muscle strength, impaired mucociliary clearance, and higher rates of comorbid conditions that complicate recovery. A-DROP applies sex-specific age thresholds: 70 years or older for men and 75 years or older for women. This adjustment reflects well-documented differences in longevity and physiological resilience between sexes. Men aged 70 and women aged 75 have broadly comparable levels of functional reserve and vulnerability to serious infection-related outcomes.
Unlike CURB-65 which uses a single age threshold of 65 for all patients, A-DROP distinguishes between men (70 years) and women (75 years). This is a deliberate recognition of sex differences in aging physiology and represents one of the key refinements of A-DROP over its predecessor.
D - Dehydration
Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) serves as a proxy for intravascular volume depletion and renal perfusion. A BUN of 21 mg/dL (which equals approximately 7.5 mmol/L) or higher signals significant dehydration, reduced effective circulating volume, or early renal dysfunction - all of which worsen the physiological reserve needed to fight infection. In addition to the BUN threshold, clinical evidence of dehydration (dry mucous membranes, reduced skin turgor, decreased urine output) may be applied when laboratory data is unavailable or borderline. This flexibility makes A-DROP more applicable in resource-limited or point-of-care settings.
Note on BUN units: BUN is reported in mg/dL in the United States and many other countries, but in mmol/L (as urea, not BUN) in the United Kingdom and some other regions. The A-DROP threshold of 21 mg/dL BUN corresponds approximately to a urea of 7.5 mmol/L. Clinicians should confirm the units reported by their laboratory to apply this criterion correctly.
R - Respiratory Failure
Respiratory compromise is the hallmark of pneumonia severity. A-DROP uses an oxygen saturation threshold (SpO2 90% or below by pulse oximetry) or an arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2 60 mmHg or below). These thresholds correspond to the definition of hypoxemic respiratory failure and represent the point at which supplemental oxygen supplementation becomes urgent. The use of pulse oximetry - widely available in most healthcare settings globally - makes this criterion practical and objective. In settings where arterial blood gas analysis is available, PaO2 can alternatively be used, though in most outpatient and emergency triage contexts, SpO2 is the primary measurement.
O - Orientation Disturbance
Altered mental status or confusion in the setting of pneumonia is a powerful indicator of systemic compromise. It may reflect hypoxemia, hypercapnia, sepsis-related encephalopathy, or direct extension of infection. Clinically, this is assessed as new-onset confusion or disorientation that is not explained by pre-existing cognitive conditions such as dementia. Standard assessment tools - including simple orientation questions (person, place, time) or abbreviated mental test scores - can be applied at bedside. Confusion in pneumonia correlates strongly with bacteremia, sepsis, and 30-day mortality across multiple validation studies.
P - (Blood) Pressure
Hypotension, defined as systolic blood pressure of 90 mmHg or below, indicates cardiovascular compromise and early septic shock physiology. In severe pneumonia, hypotension results from a combination of systemic vasodilation (mediated by inflammatory cytokines), myocardial depression, and distributive shock. The presence of hypotension in a pneumonia patient mandates urgent hospitalization and typically indicates the need for IV fluid resuscitation, vasopressor support, and intensive monitoring. This criterion carries one of the strongest associations with mortality in all CAP severity scoring systems.
A-DROP Score Interpretation and Management Recommendations
The A-DROP score maps to four severity categories with clinical management implications that are broadly accepted in international pneumonia management guidelines.
Score 1–2 - Moderate: Hospital admission recommended. Mortality risk approximately 3–8%. IV or oral antibiotics depending on presentation, monitoring for deterioration.
Score 3 - Severe: Hospital admission required; consider step-down or ICU monitoring. Mortality risk approximately 15–25%. IV antibiotics, oxygen supplementation, close monitoring.
Score 4–5 - Extremely Severe: ICU admission strongly recommended. Mortality risk exceeds 30–55%. IV broad-spectrum antibiotics, aggressive supportive care, consider mechanical ventilation.
Clinical Validation and Predictive Performance
The A-DROP score has been extensively validated across multiple patient populations and clinical settings. The landmark 2008 comparative study by Shindo and colleagues (Respirology, 2008) evaluated 329 CAP patients hospitalized at a single center in Japan and found that A-DROP and CURB-65 had nearly identical discriminatory performance for 30-day mortality, with areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve of 0.846 for A-DROP and 0.835 for CURB-65. This strong discriminatory performance across the range of CAP severity makes A-DROP a reliable triage tool.
Multiple subsequent studies confirmed these findings in diverse patient cohorts across Asia, Europe, and other regions. A retrospective study of 1,031 CAP patients in South Korea (Scientific Reports, 2018) found that A-DROP performed comparably to both CURB-65 and PSI, demonstrating its applicability beyond the Japanese population for which it was originally developed. Importantly, several studies have also examined A-DROP's performance specifically in elderly patients - the demographic most commonly affected by CAP - and confirmed its utility even in patients with median ages above 75 years.
The score has also been evaluated in specific pneumonia subtypes. Studies of aspiration pneumonia - a distinct entity increasingly common in elderly and neurologically impaired patients - demonstrated significant associations between A-DROP category and in-hospital mortality, with mortality rates of approximately 2.5% in low-to-moderate categories versus 19.4% in the severe-to-extremely-severe categories. More recently, A-DROP has been applied to COVID-19 pneumonia, where it demonstrated a significant correlation between severity classification and both mortality and mechanical ventilation rates across multiple pandemic waves in Japan.
Comparison with CURB-65 and PSI
Understanding how A-DROP relates to the other major pneumonia severity tools helps clinicians select the most appropriate instrument for their clinical context.
CURB-65 was developed from the British Thoracic Society's large multicenter dataset and uses five dichotomous variables - Confusion, elevated Urea, elevated Respiratory rate, low Blood pressure, and age above 65. A-DROP was modeled on CURB-65 but makes three key modifications: the age threshold is raised and made sex-specific; respiratory rate (a parameter requiring clinical examination) is replaced by oxygen saturation (measurable with a device); and the urea threshold is adjusted to correspond approximately to the same BUN cutpoint in mg/dL units. Studies consistently show that both scores achieve comparable discrimination of CAP severity, with AUC values typically in the range of 0.80–0.85 for 30-day mortality.
PSI remains the most complex scoring system, incorporating 20 variables across patient demographics, comorbidities, physical examination findings, and laboratory and radiographic data. Its complexity makes it impractical in busy emergency or outpatient settings, though electronic health record-based automation can reduce this burden. PSI tends to classify a higher proportion of patients into lower-severity categories than CURB-65 or A-DROP, which can be beneficial for identifying truly low-risk patients for outpatient management but may under-identify some high-risk younger patients with severe physiologic derangement.
A-DROP is best suited for settings with access to pulse oximetry and basic laboratory data including BUN. It performs particularly well in elderly patient populations. CURB-65 remains appropriate when BUN is available and respiratory rate measurement is reliable. PSI is preferred when electronic decision support is available and maximum accuracy for lower-risk patient identification is needed. No single score should be used in isolation - clinical judgment must integrate patient framing, comorbidities, social circumstances, and local resources.
Limitations of the A-DROP Score
Despite its validation and clinical utility, A-DROP has several important limitations that clinicians should understand:
Population derivation: A-DROP was developed primarily from Japanese patient cohorts. Although it has been validated in non-Japanese populations, performance may vary in demographic groups with different baseline comorbidity profiles, healthcare access, or microbiological epidemiology.
Does not incorporate comorbidities: Conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart failure, malignancy, immunosuppression, and diabetes significantly affect pneumonia prognosis but are not captured by A-DROP. In patients with significant comorbid burden, clinical judgment must supplement the numerical score.
Static assessment: A-DROP captures severity at a single point in time. Pneumonia can deteriorate or improve rapidly; serial reassessment is essential, and initial scores should not preclude subsequent escalation of care if the clinical picture worsens.
Aspiration pneumonia: Standard CAP severity scores were not originally developed for aspiration pneumonia, a distinct pathophysiological entity. While studies suggest A-DROP retains some prognostic value in this context, its performance may be different from its use in typical bacterial CAP.
Immunocompromised patients: Patients on immunosuppressive therapy, with HIV infection, on chemotherapy, or post-transplant may not exhibit classic inflammatory responses, potentially underscoring severity on clinical grounds while true physiologic compromise is severe.
BUN availability: While basic metabolic labs are usually available in emergency settings, there may be time delays or unavailability in some resource-limited environments. The provision for clinical dehydration as an alternative to BUN partially addresses this, but introduces subjectivity.
Application in Specific Patient Populations
The A-DROP score finds broad application across diverse clinical contexts, though with some important population-specific considerations.
In elderly patients, A-DROP's sex-specific age thresholds make it particularly relevant. Studies in Japanese, Korean, and European cohorts with median patient ages in the seventh and eighth decades confirm that A-DROP discriminates well across severity grades. In very elderly patients (age 85 or older), even a score of 1–2 should prompt careful consideration of inpatient management given reduced physiologic reserve.
In nursing home and healthcare-associated pneumonia (NHCAP) patients, A-DROP has been formally evaluated and included in the JRS NHCAP guidelines. Performance is broadly maintained, though NHCAP often involves more resistant organisms, which affects antibiotic selection independently of severity scoring.
In younger patients (below the A-DROP age thresholds), a score of 0 may be reassuringly predictive of low risk. However, younger patients with scores of 1 or higher - who by definition have significant physiologic derangement (hypoxia, hypotension, confusion, or severe dehydration) - warrant careful clinical evaluation and often inpatient management despite not meeting the age criterion.
Integration with Clinical Decision-Making
The A-DROP score is designed as a clinical decision support tool, not a replacement for clinical judgment. It provides a standardized framework that structures the assessment of the five most prognostically important variables, reducing variability in severity estimation between clinicians. However, the following principles should guide its application:
First, always consider the full clinical picture. Vital sign trends, work of breathing, patient report of symptoms, vaccination status, antibiotic history, and functional status all bear on appropriate management decisions. A patient with an A-DROP score of 1 who is clearly deteriorating over hours warrants closer monitoring than a stable patient with the same score.
Second, social and support factors matter. Outpatient management for mild CAP requires that the patient has reliable access to medications, follow-up, and a support person who can monitor for deterioration and facilitate return to care if needed. Patients lacking these supports may benefit from brief inpatient observation even with low severity scores.
Third, A-DROP guides site of care, not antibiotic selection. Antibiotic choice in CAP is determined by likely pathogens, local resistance patterns, allergy history, severity, and comorbidities - considerations that are separate from the severity score itself.
Validation Across Diverse Populations
One of the key questions for any scoring system originally developed in a specific national context is its transportability to different populations. A-DROP has been evaluated in patient cohorts from Japan, South Korea, China, Indonesia, and several European countries, consistently demonstrating AUC values for 30-day or in-hospital mortality in the range of 0.75–0.85.
Studies examining racial and ethnic differences in pneumonia outcomes have noted that A-DROP performs comparably to CURB-65 and PSI across East Asian, South Asian, and Western patient cohorts, supporting its use as a general-purpose severity tool. Some studies suggest that BUN thresholds may have slightly different discriminatory properties in populations with different baseline renal function or nutritional status, which is a consideration when applying any BUN-based scoring system to diverse clinical environments.
Unit conversion for BUN: 1 mg/dL BUN = 0.357 mmol/L urea. The A-DROP threshold of 21 mg/dL BUN therefore corresponds to approximately 7.5 mmol/L urea. Some laboratories report urea (as opposed to BUN); clinicians should confirm the reporting convention with their local laboratory.
A-DROP in the Context of COVID-19 Pneumonia
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted evaluation of existing pneumonia severity scores in a novel pathogen context. Multiple studies, including a large analysis of 1,141 COVID-19 pneumonia patients in Japan (Miyashita et al., Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy, 2023), demonstrated that A-DROP retained its discriminatory properties across all five COVID-19 pandemic waves. Mortality rates of 0% (mild), 3.2% (moderate), 20.8% (severe), and 55% (extremely severe) were observed, confirming the score's utility for patient triage even in the context of a novel respiratory virus.
These findings support A-DROP's use as part of initial pneumonia assessment in clinical settings regardless of the specific causative pathogen, while recognizing that specific management decisions (including antiviral therapy, immunomodulation, and infection control) will be pathogen-specific.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
The A-DROP score is a validated, simple, and clinically effective tool for assessing the severity of community-acquired pneumonia. By incorporating five dichotomous parameters - age, dehydration, respiratory failure, orientation disturbance, and hypotension - it generates a score from 0 to 5 that maps directly onto four severity categories with clear management implications: outpatient care (score 0), hospitalization (scores 1–2), intensive inpatient management (score 3), and ICU-level care (scores 4–5).
Originally developed by the Japanese Respiratory Society as a modification of the CURB-65 score, A-DROP has been validated across multiple patient cohorts worldwide including in East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Europe. Its discriminatory accuracy for 30-day mortality, with AUC values typically around 0.83–0.85, is comparable to CURB-65 and somewhat lower than PSI, but its simplicity and the clinical accessibility of its parameters make it an excellent routine triage tool in diverse healthcare settings.
As with all clinical decision support tools, A-DROP performs best when integrated with comprehensive clinical assessment. Factors not captured by the score - including comorbidity burden, trajectory of illness, social context, and local microbiological epidemiology - must inform the final management decision. This calculator is intended to facilitate rapid, accurate A-DROP scoring and supports high-quality clinical reasoning at the bedside. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for medical decisions.