Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Illinois 60612, USA.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2012 Aug;27(4):330-44. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X12000970. Epub 2012 Jul 30.
The Revised Trauma Score (RTS) has been proposed as an entry criterion to identify patients with mid-range survival probability for traumatic hemorrhagic shock studies.
HYPOTHESIS/PROBLEM: Determination of which of four RTS strata (1-3.99, 2-4.99, 1-4.99, and 2-5.99) identifies patients with predicted and actual mortality rates near 50% for use as an entry criterion in traumatic hemorrhagic shock clinical trials.
Existing database analysis in which demographic and injury severity data from two prior international Diaspirin Cross-Linked Hemoglobin (DCLHb) clinical trials were used to identify an RTS range that could be an optimal entry criterion in order to find the population of trauma patients with mid-range predicted and actual mortality rates.
Of 208 study patients, the mean age was 37 years, 65% sustained blunt trauma, 49% received DCLHb, and 57% came from the European Union study arm. The mean values were: ISS, 31 (SD = 18); RTS, 5.6 (SD = 1.8); and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), 10.4 (SD = 4.8). The mean TRISS-predicted mortality was 34% and the actual 28-day mortality was 35%. The initially proposed 1-3.99 RTS range (n = 41) had the highest predicted (79%) and actual (71%) mortality rates. The 2-5.99 RTS range (n = 79) had a 62% predicted and 53% actual mortality, and included 76% blunt trauma patients. Removal of GCS <5 patients from this RTS 2-5.99 subgroup caused a 48% further reduction in eligible patients, leaving 41 patients (20% of 208 total patients), 66% of whom sustained a blunt trauma injury. This subgroup had 54% predicted and 49% actual mortality rates. Receiver operator curve (ROC) analysis found the GCS to be as predictive of mortality as the RTS, both in the total patient population and in the RTS 2-5.99 subgroup.
The use of an RTS 2-5.99 inclusion criterion range identifies a traumatic hemorrhagic shock patient subgroup with predicted and actual mortality that approach the desired 50% rate. The exclusion of GCS <5 from this RTS 2-5.99 subgroup patients yields a smaller, more uniform patient subgroup whose mortality is more likely related to hemorrhagic shock than traumatic brain injury. Future studies should examine whether the RTS or other physiologic criteria such as the GCS score are most useful as traumatic hemorrhagic shock study entry criteria.
修订后的创伤评分(RTS)已被提议作为一项纳入标准,以识别创伤性出血性休克研究中具有中等生存概率的患者。
假设/问题:确定四个 RTS 分层(1-3.99、2-4.99、1-4.99 和 2-5.99)中的哪一个能够识别预测死亡率和实际死亡率接近 50%的患者,作为创伤性出血性休克临床试验的纳入标准。
利用两个先前的国际去氨加压素交联血红蛋白(DCLHb)临床试验的现有数据库分析,确定 RTS 范围,以便能够找到具有中等预测和实际死亡率的创伤患者群体。
在 208 名研究患者中,平均年龄为 37 岁,65%为钝性创伤,49%接受 DCLHb 治疗,57%来自欧盟研究组。平均值分别为:ISS,31(SD=18);RTS,5.6(SD=1.8);格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS),10.4(SD=4.8)。TRISS 预测的死亡率为 34%,实际 28 天死亡率为 35%。最初提出的 1-3.99 RTS 范围(n=41)的预测(79%)和实际(71%)死亡率最高。RTS 2-5.99 范围(n=79)的预测死亡率为 62%,实际死亡率为 53%,其中 76%为钝性创伤患者。将 GCS<5 的患者从 RTS 2-5.99 亚组中排除,使符合条件的患者进一步减少了 48%,剩下 41 名患者(208 名患者总数的 20%),其中 66%为钝性创伤患者。该亚组的预测死亡率和实际死亡率分别为 54%和 49%。接受者操作特征(ROC)分析发现,GCS 与 RTS 一样,无论是在总患者人群中还是在 RTS 2-5.99 亚组中,都能预测死亡率。将 GCS<5 的患者从 RTS 2-5.99 亚组中排除,会产生一个更小、更均匀的患者亚组,其死亡率更可能与出血性休克而不是创伤性脑损伤有关。未来的研究应探讨 RTS 或其他生理标准(如 GCS 评分)作为创伤性出血性休克研究纳入标准是否最有用。