Lecky Fiona, Russell Wanda, Fuller Gordon, McClelland Graham, Pennington Elspeth, Goodacre Steve, Han Kyee, Curran Andrew, Holliman Damien, Freeman Jennifer, Chapman Nathan, Stevenson Matt, Byers Sonia, Mason Suzanne, Potter Hugh, Coats Tim, Mackway-Jones Kevin, Peters Mary, Shewan Jane, Strong Mark
EMRiS Group, Health Services Research, School of Health and Related Research (SCHaRR), University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Trauma Audit and Research Network, Center of Occupational and Environmental Health, Institute of Population, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2016 Jan;20(1):1-198. doi: 10.3310/hta20010.
Reconfiguration of trauma services, with direct transport of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients to neuroscience centres (NCs), bypassing non-specialist acute hospitals (NSAHs), could potentially improve outcomes. However, delays in stabilisation of airway, breathing and circulation (ABC) and the difficulties in reliably identifying TBI at scene may make this practice deleterious compared with selective secondary transfer from nearest NSAH to NC. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance and systematic reviews suggested equipoise and poor-quality evidence - with regard to 'early neurosurgery' in this cohort - which we sought to address.
Pilot cluster randomised controlled trial of bypass to NC conducted in two ambulance services with the ambulance station (n = 74) as unit of cluster [Lancashire/Cumbria in the North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) and the North East Ambulance Service (NEAS)]. Adult patients with signs of isolated TBI [Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of < 13 in NWAS, GCS score of < 14 in NEAS] and stable ABC, injured nearest to a NSAH were transported either to that hospital (control clusters) or bypassed to the nearest NC (intervention clusters).
recruitment rate, protocol compliance, selection bias as a result of non-compliance, accuracy of paramedic TBI identification (overtriage of study inclusion criteria) and pathway acceptability to patients, families and staff. 'Open-label' secondary outcomes: 30-day mortality, 6-month Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOSE) and European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions.
Overall, 56 clusters recruited 293 (169 intervention, 124 control) patients in 12 months, demonstrating cluster randomised pre-hospital trials as viable for heath service evaluations. Overall compliance was 62%, but 90% was achieved in the control arm and when face-to-face paramedic training was possible. Non-compliance appeared to be driven by proximity of the nearest hospital and perceptions of injury severity and so occurred more frequently in the intervention arm, in which the perceived time to the NC was greater and severity of injury was lower. Fewer than 25% of recruited patients had TBI on computed tomography scan (n = 70), with 7% (n = 20) requiring neurosurgery (craniotomy, craniectomy or intracranial pressure monitoring) but a further 18 requiring admission to an intensive care unit. An intention-to-treat analysis revealed the two trial arms to be equivalent in terms of age, GCS and severity of injury. No significant 30-day mortality differences were found (8.8% vs. 9.1/%; p > 0.05) in the 273 (159/113) patients with data available. There were no apparent differences in staff and patient preferences for either pathway, with satisfaction high with both. Very low responses to invitations to consent for follow-up in the large number of mild head injury-enrolled patients meant that only 20% of patients had 6-month outcomes. The trial-based economic evaluation could not focus on early neurosurgery because of these low numbers but instead investigated the comparative cost-effectiveness of bypass compared with selective secondary transfer for eligible patients at the scene of injury.
Current NHS England practice of bypassing patients with suspected TBI to neuroscience centres gives overtriage ratios of 13 : 1 for neurosurgery and 4 : 1 for TBI. This important finding makes studying the impact of bypass to facilitate early neurosurgery not plausible using this study design. Future research should explore an efficient comparative effectiveness design for evaluating 'early neurosurgery through bypass' and address the challenge of reliable TBI diagnosis at the scene of injury.
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN68087745.
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 20, No. 1. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
创伤服务的重新配置,即将创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者直接转运至神经科学中心(NCs),绕过非专科急症医院(NSAHs),可能会改善治疗结果。然而,气道、呼吸和循环(ABC)稳定的延迟以及在现场可靠识别TBI的困难,可能使这种做法与从最近的NSAH选择性二次转运至NC相比有害。英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所的指南和系统评价表明,关于该队列中的“早期神经外科手术”,存在证据平衡和证据质量较差的情况,我们试图解决这一问题。
在两个救护服务机构中进行了一项以救护站(n = 74)为聚类单位的绕过NC的试点聚类随机对照试验[西北救护服务(NWAS)中的兰开夏郡/坎布里亚郡以及东北救护服务(NEAS)]。有孤立TBI体征的成年患者[NWAS中格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分<13,NEAS中GCS评分<14]且ABC稳定,在距离NSAH最近处受伤,被转运至该医院(对照聚类)或绕过至最近的NC(干预聚类)。
招募率、方案依从性、因不依从导致的选择偏倚、护理人员TBI识别的准确性(研究纳入标准的过度分诊)以及患者、家属和工作人员对途径的可接受性。“开放标签”次要结局:30天死亡率、6个月扩展格拉斯哥结局量表(GOSE)和欧洲五维生活质量量表。
总体而言,56个聚类在12个月内招募了293名患者(169名干预组,124名对照组),表明聚类随机院前试验对于卫生服务评估是可行的。总体依从率为62%,但对照组以及能够进行面对面护理人员培训时的依从率达到了90%。不依从似乎是由最近医院的距离以及对损伤严重程度的认知所驱动,因此在干预组中更频繁发生,在干预组中,到NC的预计时间更长且损伤严重程度更低。在计算机断层扫描中,招募的患者中不到25%患有TBI(n = 70);7%(n = 20)需要神经外科手术(开颅手术、颅骨切除术或颅内压监测),但另有18名患者需要入住重症监护病房。意向性分析显示,两个试验组在年龄、GCS和损伤严重程度方面相当。在有数据的273名患者(159/113)中,未发现30天死亡率有显著差异(8.8%对9.1%;p>0.05)。工作人员和患者对两种途径的偏好没有明显差异,对两者的满意度都很高。大量轻度头部受伤登记患者对随访同意邀请的回应率非常低,这意味着只有20%的患者有6个月的结局。基于试验的经济评估由于数量较少无法关注早期神经外科手术,而是研究了在受伤现场对于符合条件的患者,绕过与选择性二次转运相比的成本效益。
目前英格兰国民保健制度将疑似TBI患者绕过至神经科学中心的做法,神经外科手术的过度分诊比例为13∶1,TBI的过度分诊比例为4∶1。这一重要发现使得使用该研究设计来研究绕过以促进早期神经外科手术的影响变得不可行。未来的研究应该探索一种有效的比较效果设计,以评估“通过绕过进行早期神经外科手术”,并应对在受伤现场可靠诊断TBI的挑战。
当前受控试验ISRCTN68087745。
本项目由英国国家卫生研究院(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助,将在《卫生技术评估》上全文发表;第20卷,第1期。有关更多项目信息,请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站。