Patel Pious D, Kelly Katherine A, Chen Heidi, Greeno Amber, Shannon Chevis N, Naftel Robert P
1Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
2Surgical Outcomes Center for Kids, Vanderbilt Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital; and.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2021 Oct 1;28(6):638-646. doi: 10.3171/2021.7.PEDS21159. Print 2021 Dec 1.
Rural-dwelling children may suffer worse pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) outcomes due to distance from and accessibility to high-volume trauma centers. This study aimed to compare the impacts of institutional TBI volume and sociodemographics on outcomes between rural- and urban-dwelling children.
This retrospective study identified patients 0-19 years of age with ICD-9 codes for TBI in the 2012-2015 National Inpatient Sample database. Patients were characterized as rural- or urban-dwelling using United States Census classification. Logistic and linear (in log scale) regressions were performed to measure the effects of institutional characteristics, patient sociodemographics, and mechanism/severity of injury on occurrence of medical complications, mortality, length of stay (LOS), and costs. Separate models were built for rural- and urban-dwelling patients.
A total of 19,736 patients were identified (median age 11 years, interquartile range [IQR] 2-16 years, 66% male, 55% Caucasian). Overall, rural-dwelling patients had higher All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Groups injury severity (median 2 [IQR 1-3] vs 1 [IQR 1-2], p < 0.001) and more intracranial monitoring (6% vs 4%, p < 0.001). Univariate analysis showed that overall, rural-dwelling patients suffered increased medical complications (6% vs 4%, p < 0.001), mortality (6% vs 4%, p < 0.001), and LOS (median 2 days [IQR 1-4 days ] vs 2 days [IQR 1-3 days], p < 0.001), but multivariate analysis showed rural-dwelling status was not associated with these outcomes after adjusting for injury severity, mechanism, and hospital characteristics. Institutional TBI volume was not associated with medical complications, disposition, or mortality for either population but was associated with LOS for urban-dwelling patients (nonlinear beta, p = 0.008) and cost for both rural-dwelling (nonlinear beta, p < 0.001) and urban-dwelling (nonlinear beta, p < 0.001) patients.
Overall, rural-dwelling pediatric patients with TBI have worsened injury severity, mortality, and in-hospital complications, but these disparities disappear after adjusting for injury severity and mechanism. Institutional TBI volume does not impact clinical outcomes for rural- or urban-dwelling children after adjusting for these covariates. Addressing the root causes of the increased injury severity at hospital arrival may be a useful path to improve TBI outcomes for rural-dwelling children.
由于距离大容量创伤中心较远且难以到达,农村儿童可能在小儿创伤性脑损伤(TBI)方面有更差的预后。本研究旨在比较机构TBI治疗量和社会人口统计学因素对农村和城市儿童预后的影响。
这项回顾性研究在2012 - 2015年国家住院患者样本数据库中识别出年龄在0 - 19岁、具有TBI的ICD - 9编码的患者。使用美国人口普查分类将患者分为农村或城市居民。进行逻辑回归和线性(对数尺度)回归,以测量机构特征、患者社会人口统计学因素以及损伤机制/严重程度对医疗并发症发生、死亡率、住院时间(LOS)和费用的影响。为农村和城市居民患者分别建立模型。
共识别出19736例患者(中位年龄11岁,四分位间距[IQR]为2 - 16岁,66%为男性,55%为白种人)。总体而言,农村居民患者的所有患者精细诊断相关组损伤严重程度更高(中位数2[IQR 1 - 3] vs 1[IQR 1 - 2],p < 0.001),且接受颅内监测的比例更高(6% vs 4%,p < 0.001)。单因素分析表明,总体上农村居民患者出现更多医疗并发症(6% vs 4%,p < 0.001)、死亡率更高(6% vs 4%,p < 0.001)以及住院时间更长(中位数2天[IQR 1 - 4天] vs 2天[IQR 1 - 3天],p < 0.001),但多因素分析显示,在调整损伤严重程度、机制和医院特征后,农村居住状态与这些预后并无关联。机构TBI治疗量与这两类人群的医疗并发症、出院情况或死亡率均无关联,但与城市居民患者的住院时间相关(非线性β,p = 0.008),与农村居民(非线性β,p < 0.001)和城市居民(非线性β,p < 0.001)患者的费用均相关。
总体而言,农村TBI小儿患者的损伤严重程度、死亡率和院内并发症更差,但在调整损伤严重程度和机制后,这些差异消失。在调整这些协变量后,机构TBI治疗量对农村或城市儿童的临床预后并无影响。解决入院时损伤严重程度增加的根本原因可能是改善农村儿童TBI预后的有效途径。