Craig Hannah A, Lowe David J, Khan Angela, Paton Martin, Gordon Malcolm Wg
University of Glasgow School of Medicine, G12 8QQ, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, G51 4TF, United Kingdom; Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8RZ, United Kingdom.
Injury. 2024 Jun;55(6):111470. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2024.111470. Epub 2024 Feb 28.
Few studies effectively quantify the long-term incidence of death following injury. The absence of detailed mortality and underlying cause of death data results in limited understanding and a potential underestimation of the consequences at a population level. This study takes a nationwide approach to identify the one-year mortality following injury in Scotland, evaluating survivorship in relation to pre-existing comorbidities and incidental causes of death.
This retrospective cohort study assessed the one-year mortality of adult trauma patients with an Injury Severity Score ≥ 9 during 2020 using the Scottish Trauma Audit Group (STAG) registry linked to inpatient hospital data and death certificate records. Patients were divided into three groups: trauma death, trauma-contributed death, and non-trauma death. Kaplan-Meier curves were used for survival analysis to evaluate mortality, and cox proportional hazards regression analysed risk factors linked to death.
4056 patients were analysed with a median age 63 years (58-88) and male predominance (55.2 %). Falls accounted for 73.1 % of injuries followed by motor vehicle accidents (16.3 %) and blunt force (4.9 %). Extremity was the most commonly injured region overall followed by chest and head. However, head injury prevailed in those who died. The registry demonstrated a one-year mortality of 19.3 % with 55 % deaths occurring post-discharge. Of all deaths reported, 35.3 % were trauma deaths, and 47.7 % were trauma-contributed deaths. These groups accounted for over 70 % of mortality within 30 days of hospital admission and continued to represent the majority of deaths up to 6 months post-injury. Patients who died after 6 months were mainly the result of non-traumatic causes, frequently circulatory, neoplastic, and respiratory diseases (37.7 %, 12.3 %, 9.1 %, respectively). Independent risk factors for one-year mortality included a GCS ≤ 8, modified Charlson Comorbidity score >5, Injury Severity Score >25, serious head injury, age and sex.
With a one-year mortality of 19.3 %, and post-discharge deaths higher than previously appreciated, patients can face an extended period of survival uncertainty. As mortality due to index trauma lasted up to 6 months post-admission, short-term outcomes fail to represent trauma burden and so cogent survival predictions should be avoided in clinical and patient settings.
很少有研究能有效量化受伤后的长期死亡率。缺乏详细的死亡率和潜在死因数据导致人们对人群层面的后果理解有限,且可能低估其影响。本研究采用全国性方法来确定苏格兰受伤后的一年死亡率,评估与既往合并症和附带死因相关的生存率。
这项回顾性队列研究使用与住院医院数据和死亡证明记录相关联的苏格兰创伤审计小组(STAG)登记册,评估了2020年损伤严重程度评分≥9的成年创伤患者的一年死亡率。患者分为三组:创伤死亡、创伤导致的死亡和非创伤死亡。采用Kaplan-Meier曲线进行生存分析以评估死亡率,并使用Cox比例风险回归分析与死亡相关的风险因素。
共分析了4056例患者,中位年龄63岁(58 - 88岁),男性占多数(55.2%)。跌倒占损伤的73.1%,其次是机动车事故(16.3%)和钝器伤(4.9%)。四肢是总体上最常受伤的部位,其次是胸部和头部。然而,死亡患者中头部损伤最为常见。登记册显示一年死亡率为19.3%,55%的死亡发生在出院后。在所有报告的死亡中,35.3%为创伤死亡,47.7%为创伤导致的死亡。这些组在入院后30天内占死亡率的70%以上,并且在受伤后6个月内仍然是大多数死亡的原因。6个月后死亡的患者主要是非创伤性原因导致的,常见的有循环系统疾病、肿瘤和呼吸系统疾病(分别为37.7%、12.3%、9.1%)。一年死亡率的独立风险因素包括格拉斯哥昏迷评分(GCS)≤8、改良查尔森合并症评分>5、损伤严重程度评分>25、严重头部损伤、年龄和性别。
一年死亡率为19.3%,且出院后死亡人数高于先前预期,患者可能面临较长时间的生存不确定性。由于指数创伤导致的死亡率在入院后持续长达6个月,短期结果无法代表创伤负担,因此在临床和患者环境中应避免做出有说服力的生存预测。