Maxwell Bryan G, Greenlaw Andrea, Smith Wendy J, Barbosa Ronald R, Ropp Kate M, Lundeberg Megan R
Department of Anesthesiology, Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, Portland, OR, USA.
Department of Trauma Services, Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, Portland, OR, USA.
Womens Health (Lond). 2020 Jan-Dec;16:1745506520933021. doi: 10.1177/1745506520933021.
Pregnancy has been identified as a risk factor for poor outcomes after traumatic injury, but prior outcome analyses are conflicting and dated. We sought to examine outcomes in a contemporary cohort.
Retrospective cohort analysis at a level I trauma center's institutional registry from 2009 to 2018, with comparison to population-level demographic trends in women of reproductive age and pregnancy prevalence. Unadjusted cohorts of pregnant versus nonpregnant trauma patients were compared. Pregnant patients then were matched on age, mechanism of injury, year, and injury severity score with nonpregnant controls for adjusted analysis with a primary outcome of maternal mortality.
Despite declining birth and pregnancy rates in the population, pregnant women comprised a stable 5.3% of female trauma patients of reproductive age without decline over the study period (p = 0.53). Compared with nonpregnant women, pregnant trauma patients had a lower injury severity score (1 [1-5] vs 5 [1-10] p < 0.0001) and a shorter length of stay (1 [1-2] vs 1 [1-4] p = 0.04), were less likely to have CT imaging (48.8% vs 67.4%, p < 0.0001) and more likely to be admitted (89.3% vs 79.2%, p = 0.003). Positive toxicology screens were less prevalent in pregnant women, but only for ethanol (5.4% vs 31.4%, p < 0.0001); there was no difference in rates of cannabis, opiates, or cocaine. After matching to adjust for age, year, mechanism of injury, and injury severity score, mortality occurred significantly more frequently in the pregnant cohort (2.1% vs 0.2%, OR = 13.5 [1.39-130.9], p = 0.02).
Pregnant trauma patients have not declined in our population despite population-level declines in pregnancy. After adjusting for lower injury severity, pregnant women were at substantially greater risk of mortality. This supports ongoing concern for pregnant trauma patients as a vulnerable population. Further efforts should optimize systems of care to maximize the chances of rescue for both mother and fetus.
妊娠已被确定为创伤性损伤后不良结局的一个危险因素,但既往的结局分析存在冲突且年代久远。我们试图在一个当代队列中研究结局情况。
对一家一级创伤中心2009年至2018年机构登记处的数据进行回顾性队列分析,并与育龄妇女的人口统计学趋势及妊娠患病率进行比较。比较未调整的妊娠创伤患者与非妊娠创伤患者队列。然后将妊娠患者与非妊娠对照者按年龄、损伤机制、年份和损伤严重程度评分进行匹配,以孕产妇死亡率作为主要结局进行调整分析。
尽管总体出生率和妊娠率在下降,但妊娠妇女在育龄期女性创伤患者中所占比例稳定在5.3%,在研究期间没有下降(p = 0.53)。与非妊娠妇女相比,妊娠创伤患者的损伤严重程度评分较低(1[1 - 5]对5[1 - 10],p < 0.0001),住院时间较短(1[1 - 2]对1[1 - 4],p = 0.04),接受CT检查的可能性较小(48.8%对67.4%,p < 0.0001),入院的可能性较大(89.3%对79.2%,p = 0.003)。妊娠妇女中阳性毒理学筛查的发生率较低,但仅针对乙醇(5.4%对31.4%,p < 0.0001);大麻、阿片类药物或可卡因的发生率没有差异。在对年龄、年份、损伤机制和损伤严重程度评分进行匹配调整后,妊娠队列中的死亡率显著更高(2.1%对0.2%,OR = 13.5[1.39 - 130.9],p = 0.02)。
尽管总体妊娠率下降,但我们研究人群中妊娠创伤患者的比例并未下降。在调整较低的损伤严重程度后,妊娠妇女的死亡风险显著更高。这支持了对妊娠创伤患者这一弱势群体持续的关注。应进一步努力优化护理系统,以最大限度地提高母亲和胎儿的获救几率。