| Literature DB >> 31541258 |
Marjolein A M Mulders1, Monique M J Walenkamp2, Nico L Sosef3, Frank Ouwehand4, Romuald van Velde5, Carel J Goslings6, Niels W L Schep7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: While most patients with wrist trauma are routinely referred for radiography, around 50% of these radiographs show no fracture. To avoid unnecessary radiographs, the Amsterdam Wrist Rules (AWR) have previously been developed and validated. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the effect of the implementation of the AWR at the Emergency Department (ED).Entities:
Keywords: Decision rule; Distal radius; Fracture; Implementation; Radiograph; Trauma
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31541258 PMCID: PMC7280343 DOI: 10.1007/s00068-019-01194-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg ISSN: 1863-9933 Impact factor: 3.693
Fig. 1AWR mobile application: patient demographics and clinical findings
Fig. 2AWR mobile application: recommendation to make a wrist radiograph or not
Fig. 3AWR mobile application: adherence of the physicians
Fig. 4Flow diagram of patient selection. Missed inclusions are patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria but were not included by unknown reasons
Baseline characteristics before and after implementation of the AWR
| Before implementation AWR, | After implementation AWR, | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (median (IQR)) | 50 (31–63) | 51 (32–67) | 0.294 |
| Female (%) | 60.5 | 60.7 | 0.957 |
| Distal radius fractures (%) | 43 | 44 | 0.814 |
Extra-articular (%) Intra-articular (%) | 38 62 | 46 54 | 0.071 |
N number, IQR interquartile range
Primary and secondary outcomes
| Before implementation AWR, | After implementation AWR, | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Wrist radiographs (%) | 99.4 | 84.1 | < 0.001* |
| ED length of stay (h) [median (IQR)] | 1:59 (1:25–3:05) | 2:12 (1:31–3:13) | 0.074 |
IQR interquartile range
*Statistical significance
Performance of the Amsterdam Wrist Rules after implementation among 402 patients with wrist trauma
| No distal radius fracture | Distal radius fracture | |
|---|---|---|
| AWR recommends radiograph | 162 | 176 |
| AWR recommends no radiograph | 64 | 0 |
| Sensitivity (% [95% CI]) | 100% [97.3–100%) | |
| Specificity (% [95% CI]) | 28.3% [22.6–34.7%] | |
CI confidence interval
Performance was tested based on the 15.3% reduction in wrist radiographs, applying the definition of a clinically relevant distal radius fracture
Characteristics of 225 non-fracture patients with and without a radiograph of the wrist in the after group
| Wrist radiograph, | No wrist radiograph, | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall ED length of stay [median (IQR)] | 1:58 (1:25–2:42) | 1:24 (0:55–1:54) | 0.015 |
IQR interquartile range
Fig. 5Physician compliance and missed fractures