Khan Aahad, Gangisetty Akhil, Mitchell Steve, Daughtery Nick, Goslin Brent, DeVoe William B, Bach John
Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA.
Surgery, OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus, USA.
Cureus. 2025 May 15;17(5):e84173. doi: 10.7759/cureus.84173. eCollection 2025 May.
Introduction Trauma continues to be a major cause of death in the United States, with uncontrolled bleeding contributing to a significant portion of trauma-related fatalities. In recent years, the management of hemorrhagic trauma patients has expanded to include interventional radiology (IR). The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma recommends that Level 1 and 2 trauma centers ensure IR availability within 60 minutes of the decision to proceed with angiography. Delays in IR intervention are associated with poorer outcomes and increased mortality. To address this, our Level 2 trauma center developed and implemented an institutional protocol involving trauma surgeons, interventional radiologists, residents, trauma advanced practice providers, ED staff, and IR nursing teams to reduce time to intervention for trauma patients with uncontrolled hemorrhage. Methods On March 1, 2023, a new institutional protocol was launched to expedite IR intervention in trauma patients with hemorrhage. When such a patient is identified, the trauma team leader (TTL) directly contacts an IR physician to review imaging and determine the need for urgent endovascular therapy. If IR intervention is agreed upon, the TTL places a STAT IR consult, which marks the start time for time tracking. This time period ends when an IR physician achieves vascular access. To accelerate intervention, the TTL informs the primary nurse of the protocol activation, and a trauma vascular IR (VIR) alert is sent via Vocera. The primary nurse and VIR charge nurse coordinate room availability, prepare the patient for transport, and ready the IR suite. Results Data were collected prospectively after protocol implementation (beginning March 2023) and retrospectively for the period starting January 2022. The pre-protocol cohort included 11 patients, and the post-protocol cohort included 12 patients. Comparison of the two groups showed a significant reduction in mean consult-to-needle time: 102 minutes ± 39.5 pre-protocol vs. 48.2 minutes ± 12.7 post-protocol (p < 0.001). Conclusions Timely VIR intervention is essential for effective hemorrhage control in trauma patients. Transitioning a patient from the trauma bay to the IR suite requires seamless coordination across multiple teams, and delays can negatively impact outcomes. Establishing a standardized institutional protocol can reduce time to intervention by streamlining workflows and minimizing communication-related delays. While our study is limited by a small sample size, ongoing data collection is expected to further support these initial findings.
引言
创伤仍然是美国主要的死亡原因之一,出血无法控制导致了很大一部分创伤相关死亡。近年来,出血性创伤患者的治疗已扩展至包括介入放射学(IR)。美国外科医师学会创伤委员会建议,一级和二级创伤中心应确保在决定进行血管造影后的60分钟内具备介入放射学服务。介入放射学干预的延迟与较差的治疗结果及死亡率增加相关。为解决这一问题,我们的二级创伤中心制定并实施了一项机构协议,涉及创伤外科医生、介入放射科医生、住院医师、创伤高级执业提供者、急诊科工作人员和介入放射学护理团队,以减少对出血无法控制的创伤患者的干预时间。
方法
2023年3月1日,一项新的机构协议启动,以加快对出血性创伤患者的介入放射学干预。当识别出此类患者时,创伤团队负责人(TTL)直接联系介入放射科医生,以查看影像并确定是否需要紧急血管内治疗。如果同意进行介入放射学干预,TTL会发出紧急介入放射学会诊申请,这标志着时间跟踪的开始时间。当介入放射科医生实现血管通路时,这段时间结束。为加速干预,TTL将协议启动情况告知责任护士,并通过Vocera发送创伤血管介入放射学(VIR)警报。责任护士和VIR护士长协调手术室可用性,为患者转运做准备,并准备好介入放射学套房。
结果
在协议实施后(从开始于2023年3月)前瞻性收集数据,并对2022年1月开始的时间段进行回顾性收集。协议实施前的队列包括11名患者,协议实施后的队列包括12名患者。两组比较显示,平均会诊到穿刺时间显著缩短:协议实施前为102分钟±39.5分钟,协议实施后为48.2分钟±12.7分钟(p<0.001)。
结论
及时的VIR干预对于创伤患者有效控制出血至关重要。将患者从创伤病房转移到介入放射学套房需要多个团队的无缝协调,而延迟可能会对治疗结果产生负面影响。建立标准化的机构协议可以通过简化工作流程和尽量减少与沟通相关的延迟来减少干预时间。虽然我们的研究受样本量小的限制,但持续的数据收集有望进一步支持这些初步发现。