Spence Richard T, Scott John W, Haider Adil, Navsaria Pradeep H, Nicol Andrew J
Department of Surgery, Groote Schuur Trauma Center, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Center for Surgery and Public Health, Bringham and Woman's Hospital, Boston, MA; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
Surgery. 2017 Sep;162(3):620-627. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2017.04.024. Epub 2017 Jul 5.
The unacceptably high rate of death and disability due to injury in Sub-Saharan Africa is alarming. The objective of this work was to compare mortality rates between severely injured trauma patients at a high-volume trauma center in South Africa with matched patients in the United States.
Clinical databases from the Groote Schuur Hospital for patients treated in Cape Town, South Africa and the American College of Surgeon's National Trauma Databank for patients treated at large academic trauma centers in the United States were used. Coarsened exact matching identified the most comparable patient populations based on sex, age, intent, injury type, injury mechanism, Injury Severity Score, Glasgow Coma Score, and systolic blood pressure. Conditional logistic regression generated odds ratios for mortality among the entire sample and clinically relevant subgroups.
Coarsened exact matching matched 97.9% of the Groote Schuur Hospital patient sample, resulting in 3,206 matched-pairs between the Groote Schuur Hospital and National Trauma Databank cohorts. Conditional logistic regression revealed an odds ratio of mortality of 1.67 (95% confidence interval, 1.10-2.52) for patients at Groote Schuur Hospital compared with matched patients from the National Trauma Databank. Subset analyses revealed significantly increased odds of mortality among patients with blunt injuries (odds ratio 3.40, 95% confidence interval, 1.68-6.88) and patients with a Glasgow Coma Score of 8 or lower (odds ratio 4.33, 95% confidence interval, 2.10-8.95). No statistically significant difference was identified among patients with penetrating injuries or with a Glasgow Coma Score >8 (P value .90 and .39, respectively).
International comparisons of interhospital variation in risk-adjusted outcomes following trauma can identify opportunities for quality improvement and have the potential to measure the impact of any corrective strategy implemented.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区因伤导致的高得令人无法接受的死亡率和残疾率令人担忧。这项研究的目的是比较南非一家高容量创伤中心的重伤创伤患者与美国匹配患者的死亡率。
使用了南非开普敦格罗特舒尔医院治疗患者的临床数据库以及美国外科医生学会国家创伤数据库中美国大型学术创伤中心治疗患者的数据。粗化精确匹配根据性别、年龄、意图、损伤类型、损伤机制、损伤严重程度评分、格拉斯哥昏迷评分和收缩压确定了最具可比性的患者群体。条件逻辑回归生成了整个样本以及临床相关亚组中死亡率的比值比。
粗化精确匹配匹配了格罗特舒尔医院患者样本的97.9%,在格罗特舒尔医院和国家创伤数据库队列之间产生了3206对匹配对。条件逻辑回归显示,与国家创伤数据库中的匹配患者相比,格罗特舒尔医院患者的死亡率比值比为1.67(95%置信区间,1.10 - 2.52)。亚组分析显示,钝性损伤患者(比值比3.40,95%置信区间,1.68 - 6.88)和格拉斯哥昏迷评分为8或更低的患者(比值比4.33,95%置信区间,2.10 - 8.95)的死亡几率显著增加。穿透性损伤患者或格拉斯哥昏迷评分>8的患者之间未发现统计学显著差异(P值分别为0.90和0.39)。
创伤后风险调整结局的医院间差异的国际比较可以识别质量改进的机会,并有可能衡量所实施的任何纠正策略的影响。