Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA.
Department of Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, USA.
J Burn Care Res. 2023 Jul 5;44(4):845-851. doi: 10.1093/jbcr/irac168.
Although single-institution studies have described the relationship between hypothermia, burn severity, and complications, there are no national estimates on how temperature on admission impacts hospital mortality. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between admission temperature and complications on a national scale to expose opportunities for improved outcomes. The US National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) was analyzed between 2007 and 2018. Mortality was modeled using multivariable logistic regression including burn severity variables (% total burn surface area (TBSA), inhalation injury, emergency department (ED) temperature), demographics, and facility variables. Temperature was parsed into three categories: hypothermia (<36.0°C), euthermia (36.0-37.9°C), and hyperthermia (≥38.0°C). A total of 116,796 burn encounters were included of which 77.9% were euthermic, 20.6% were hypothermic and 1.45% were hyperthermic on admission. For every 1.0C drop in body temperature from 36.0°C, mortality increased by 5%. Both hypothermia and hyperthermia were independently associated with increased odds of mortality when controlling for age, gender, inhalation injury, number of comorbidities, and %TBSA burned (p < .001). All temperatures below 36.0°C were significantly associated with increased odds of mortality. Patients with ED temperatures between 32.5 and 33.5°C had the highest odds of mortality (22.0, 95% CI 15.6-31.0, p < .001). ED hypothermia and hyperthermia are independently associated with mortality even when controlling for known covariates associated with inpatient death. These findings underscore the importance of early warming interventions both at the prehospital stage and upon ED arrival. ED temperature could become a quality metric in benchmarking burn centers to improve mortality.
虽然单中心研究已经描述了低温、烧伤严重程度和并发症之间的关系,但目前还没有全国范围内关于入院时体温如何影响住院死亡率的估计。本研究旨在评估全国范围内入院时体温与并发症之间的关系,以发现改善预后的机会。该研究分析了 2007 年至 2018 年期间的美国国家创伤数据库(NTDB)。使用多变量逻辑回归模型对死亡率进行建模,该模型包括烧伤严重程度变量(%总烧伤表面积(TBSA)、吸入性损伤、急诊室(ED)温度)、人口统计学和医疗机构变量。将体温分为三类:低体温(<36.0°C)、正常体温(36.0-37.9°C)和高热(≥38.0°C)。共纳入 116796 例烧伤患者,其中 77.9%为正常体温,20.6%为低体温,1.45%为高热。体温每降低 1.0°C,死亡率增加 5%。在控制年龄、性别、吸入性损伤、合并症数量和烧伤面积百分比(%TBSA)后,低体温和高热均与死亡率增加独立相关(p<0.001)。所有低于 36.0°C 的体温均与死亡率增加显著相关。ED 温度在 32.5-33.5°C 之间的患者死亡率最高(22.0,95%CI 15.6-31.0,p<0.001)。即使在控制与住院死亡相关的已知混杂因素后,ED 低体温和高热仍与死亡率独立相关。这些发现强调了在院前阶段和 ED 到达后进行早期升温干预的重要性。ED 温度可能成为基准烧伤中心以提高死亡率的质量指标。