Literature DB >> 29799916

Accuracy of Pediatric Trauma Field Triage: A Systematic Review.

Rogier van der Sluijs1, Eveline A J van Rein1, Joep G J Wijnand1, Luke P H Leenen1, Mark van Heijl1,2.   

Abstract

Importance: Field triage of pediatric patients with trauma is critical for transporting the right patient to the right hospital. Mortality and lifelong disabilities are potentially attributable to erroneously transporting a patient in need of specialized care to a lower-level trauma center. Objective: To quantify the accuracy of field triage and associated diagnostic protocols used to identify children in need of specialized trauma care. Evidence Review: MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials were searched from database inception to November 6, 2017, for studies describing the accuracy of diagnostic tests to identify children in need of specialized trauma care in a prehospital setting. Identified articles with a study population including patients not transported by emergency medical services were excluded. Quality assessment was performed using a modified version of the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2. Findings: After deduplication, 1430 relevant articles were assessed, a full-text review of 38 articles was conducted, and 5 of those articles were included. All studies were observational, published between 1996 and 2017, and conducted in the United States, and data collection was prospective in 1 study. Three different protocols were studied that analyzed a combined total of 1222 children in need of specialized trauma care. One protocol was specifically developed for a pediatric out-of-hospital cohort. The percentage of pediatric patients requiring specialized trauma care in each study varied between 2.6% (110 of 4197) and 54.7% (58 of 106). The sensitivity of the prehospital triage tools ranged from 49.1% to 87.3%, and the specificity ranged from 41.7% to 84.8%. No prehospital triage protocol alone complied with the international standard of 95% or greater sensitivity. Undertriage and overtriage rates, representative of the quality of the full diagnostic strategy to transport a patient to the right hospital, were not reported for inclusive trauma systems or emergency medical services regions. Conclusions and Relevance: It is crucial to transport the right patient to the right hospital. Yet the quality of the full diagnostic strategy to determine the optimal receiving hospital is unknown. None of the investigated field triage protocols complied with current sensitivity targets. Improved efforts are needed to develop accurate child-specific tools to prevent undertriage and its potential life-threatening consequences.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29799916     DOI: 10.1001/jamasurg.2018.1050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Surg        ISSN: 2168-6254            Impact factor:   14.766


  9 in total

1.  Air Rescue for Pediatric Trauma in a Metropolitan Region of Brazil: Profiles, Outcomes, and Overtriage Rates.

Authors:  Paulo C M Colbachini; Fernando A L Marson; Andressa O Peixoto; Luisa Sarti; Andrea M A Fraga
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 3.569

2.  A Prehospital Triage System to Detect Traumatic Intracranial Hemorrhage Using Machine Learning Algorithms.

Authors:  Daisu Abe; Motoki Inaji; Takeshi Hase; Shota Takahashi; Ryosuke Sakai; Fuga Ayabe; Yoji Tanaka; Yasuhiro Otomo; Taketoshi Maehara
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2022-06-01

3.  So you need a surgeon? Need for surgeon presence as an alternative metric to predict outcomes and assess triage in the pediatric trauma population.

Authors:  Paul McGaha; Tabitha Garwe; Jeremy Johnson; Kenneth Stewart; Zoona Sarwar; Robert W Letton
Journal:  J Pediatr Surg       Date:  2019-11-09       Impact factor: 2.549

4.  Factors that predict the need for early surgeon presence in the setting of pediatric trauma.

Authors:  Paul McGaha; Tabitha Garwe; Kenneth Stewart; Zoona Sarwar; Justin Robbins; Jeremy Johnson; Robert W Letton
Journal:  J Pediatr Surg       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 2.549

5.  Association of mechanism of injury with overtriage of injured youth patients as trauma alerts.

Authors:  Jessica Lynn Ryan; Etienne Pracht; Barbara Langland-Orban; Marie Crandall
Journal:  Trauma Surg Acute Care Open       Date:  2019-12-29

6.  Effect of under triage on early mortality after major pediatric trauma: a registry-based propensity score matching analysis.

Authors:  François-Xavier Ageron; Jordan Porteaud; Jean-Noël Evain; Anne Millet; Jules Greze; Cécile Vallot; Albrice Levrat; Guillaume Mortamet; Pierre Bouzat
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 5.469

7.  National guideline for the field triage of injured patients: Recommendations of the National Expert Panel on Field Triage, 2021.

Authors:  Craig D Newgard; Peter E Fischer; Mark Gestring; Holly N Michaels; Gregory J Jurkovich; E Brooke Lerner; Mary E Fallat; Theodore R Delbridge; Joshua B Brown; Eileen M Bulger
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 3.697

Review 8.  Accuracy of pre-hospital triage tools for major trauma: a systematic review with meta-analysis and net clinical benefit.

Authors:  Primiano Iannone; Osvaldo Chiara; Silvia Gianola; Greta Castellini; Annalisa Biffi; Gloria Porcu; Andrea Fabbri; Maria Pia Ruggieri; Nino Stocchetti; Antonello Napoletano; Daniela Coclite; Daniela D'Angelo; Alice Josephine Fauci; Laura Iacorossi; Roberto Latina; Katia Salomone; Shailvi Gupta
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 5.469

9.  Does Mechanism of Injury Predict Trauma Center Need for Children?

Authors:  E Brooke Lerner; Mohamed Badawy; Jeremy T Cushman; Amy L Drendel; Nicole Fumo; Courtney M C Jones; Manish N Shah; David M Gourlay
Journal:  Prehosp Emerg Care       Date:  2020-03-24       Impact factor: 3.077

  9 in total

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