| Literature DB >> 21992236 |
Kjetil Gorseth Ringdal1, Hans Morten Lossius, J Mary Jones, Jens M Lauritsen, Timothy J Coats, Cameron S Palmer, Rolf Lefering, Stefano Di Bartolomeo, David J Dries, Kjetil Søreide.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: No worldwide, standardised definitions exist for documenting, reporting and comparing data from severely injured trauma patients. This study evaluated the feasibility of collecting the data variables of the international consensus-derived Utstein Trauma Template.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21992236 PMCID: PMC3334788 DOI: 10.1186/cc10485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Flow diagram of invited and included centres and patients. The number of invited and participating centres, and the number of submitted and included patients are shown.
Characteristics of participating centres (n = 24)
| Centre characteristics | Values |
|---|---|
| In own registry | 19 (79.2%) |
| In database designed for purpose | 5 (20.8%) |
| Yes | 10 (41.7%) |
| No | 14 (58.3%) |
| Local/regional | 20 (83.3%) |
| National/multi-national | 2 (8.3%) |
| No registry | 2 (8.3%) |
| Number of patients with ISS > 15 received in 2008, median (IQR) | 191 (110 to 490); |
| Number of patients with NISS > 15 in 2008, median (IQR) | 200 (78 to 1794); |
| Number of hospitals the centre/registry represents, median (range) | 1 (1 to 152) |
IQR, Interquartile range; ISS, Injury Severity Score; NISS, New Injury Severity Score.
Characteristics of the included trauma patients (n = 783)
| Demographics | Values |
|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR) | 41 (24 to 60) |
| Male | 572 (73.1%) |
| Female | 211 (26.9%) |
| Blunt | 713 (91.1%) |
| Penetrating | 68 (8.7%) |
| | 2 (0.2%) |
| Traffic: motor vehicle accident (excluding motorcycle) | 154 (19.7%) |
| Traffic: motorcycle accident | 114 (14.6%) |
| Traffic: bicycle accident | 48 (6.1%) |
| Traffic: pedestrian | 68 (8.7%) |
| Traffic: other | 31 (4.0%) |
| Shot | 36 (4.6%) |
| Stabbed | 31 (4.0%) |
| Struck or hit by blunt object | 33 (4.2%) |
| Low energy fall | 87 (11.1%) |
| High energy fall | 151 (19.3%) |
| Other | 22 (2.8%) |
| Unknown | 5 (0.6%) |
| | 3 (0.4%) |
| Head | 1,148 (26.4%) |
| Face | 407 (9.4%) |
| Neck | 16 (0.4%) |
| Thorax | 713 (16.4%) |
| Abdomen | 252 (5.8%) |
| Spine | 426 (9.8%) |
| Upper extremity | 388 (8.9%) |
| Lower extremity | 532 (12.3%) |
| External and other | 85 (2.0%) |
| | 375 (8.6%) |
| AIS 1 to 3 | 3,554 (81.9%) |
| AIS 4 to 6 | 772 (17.8%) |
| AIS 9 (unknown) | 16 (0.3%) |
| 16 to 24 | 313 (40.0%) |
| 25 to 40 | 283 (36.1%) |
| 41 to 56 | 123 (15.7%) |
| 57 to 75 | 64 (8.2%) |
| Died | 110 (14.0%) |
| Survived | 621 (79.3%) |
| Unknown | 43 (5.5%) |
| | 9 (1.1%) |
AIS, Abbreviated Injury Scale; IQR, Interquartile range; NISS, New Injury Severity Score
Number and proportion of collected Utstein variables, differences in variable definitions, and data collection difficulties
| Core data variable | Centres collecting this data variable | Applied a different definition | Data variable was difficult to collect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 24 (100%) | 0 | 0 |
| In-hospital SBP | 24 (100%) | 0 | 1 (4.2%) |
| Hospital length of stay | 24 (100%) | 0 | 1 (4.2%) |
| Age | 24 (100%) | 1 (4.2%) | 0 |
| Dominating type | 24 (100%) | 2 (8.3%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Intention of injury | 24 (100%) | 2 (8.3%) | 3 (12.5%) |
| Discharge destination | 24 (100%) | 4 (16.7%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Mechanism of injury | 24 (100%) | 7 (29.2%) | 3 (12.5%) |
| Abbreviated Injury Scale | 24 (100%) | 8 (33.3%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Survival status | 24 (100%) | 11 (45.8%) | 4 (16.7%) |
| In-hospital RR | 23 (95.8%) | 0 | 6 (25.0%) |
| Pre-hospital SBP | 23 (95.8%) | 1 (4.3%) | 5 (21.7%) |
| Pre-hospital GCS | 23 (95.8%) | 2 (8.7%) | 5 (21.7%) |
| Pre-hospital RR | 23 (95.8%) | 2 (8.7%) | 8 (34.8%) |
| Pre-hospital GCS motor component | 22 (91.7%) | 2 (9.1%) | 6 (27.3%) |
| In-hospital GCS | 22 (91.7%) | 2 (9.1%) | 1 (4.5%) |
| Pre-hospital cardiac arrest | 22 (91.7%) | 3 (13.6%) | 1 (4.5%) |
| Pre-injury ASA-PS classification | 22 (91.7%) | 7 (31.8%) | 6 (27.3%) |
| In-hospital GCS motor component | 21 (87.5%) | 2 (9.5%) | 1 (4.8%) |
| Days on ventilator | 21 (87.5%) | 5 (23.8%) | 5 (23.8%) |
| INR | 20 (83.3%) | 3 (15.0%) | 1 (5.0%) |
| GOS score at discharge | 20 (83.3%) | 3 (15.0%) | 5 (25.0%) |
| 19 (79.2%)a | 1 (5.3%)a | 1 (5.3%)a | |
| Arterial base excess | 19 (79.2%) | 1 (5.3%) | 3 (15.8%) |
| 18 (75.0%)a | 2 (11.1%)a | 2 (11.1%)a | |
| 18 (75.0%)a | 2 (11.1%)a | 4 (22.2%)a | |
| 17 (70.8%)a | 1 (5.9%)a | 1 (5.9%)a | |
| Inter-hospital transfer | 24 (100%) | 1 (4.2%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Transportation type | 24 (100%) | 4 (16.7%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Type of first key emergency intervention | 24 (100%) | 4 (16.7%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Highest level of in-hospital care | 23 (95.8%) | 1 (4.3%) | 4 (17.4%) |
| Pre-hospital airway management | 23 (95.8%) | 3 (13.0%) | 4 (17.4%) |
| Trauma team activation | 22 (91.7%) | 2 (9.1%) | 3 (13.6%) |
| Time from alarm until hospital arrival | 22 (91.7%) | 2 (9.1%) | 5 (22.7%) |
| Highest level of pre-hospital care provided | 22 (91.7%) | 4 (18.2%) | 4 (18.2%) |
| Type of pre-hospital airway management | 20 (83.3%) | 4 (20.0%) | 4 (20.0%) |
| Time until first CT scan | 23 (95.8%) | 4 (17.4%) | 7 (30.4%) |
| Time from alarm until arrival at scene | 22 (91.7%) | 1 (4.5%) | 6 (27.3%) |
| Time until first key emergency intervention | 22 (91.7%) | 4 (18.2%) | 4 (18.2%) |
| Time until normal arterial base excess | 17 (70.8%) | 2 (11.8%) | 6 (35.3%) |
a The clinical categories relate to cases for which continuous data were not submitted.
ASA-PS, American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status; EMS, emergency medical service; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; GOS, Glasgow Outcome Scale; LOS, length of stay; RR, respiratory rate; SBP, systolic blood pressure
Figure 2Completeness of the Utstein core variables among the participating centres. Current completeness of Utstein core variables (n = 24 centres). The proportion of centres collecting each variable, and the proportion of eligible patients with reported information (with 95% CI) are shown.
Figure 3Completeness of continuous and combined values of systolic blood pressure and respiratory rate. The figure shows the completeness of continuous values of systolic blood pressure and respiratory rate versus the completeness of a combination of categorical and continuous values of systolic blood pressure and respiratory rate.