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LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. – Regionalized trauma care significantly reduces long-term mortality and maintains similar functional outcomes in patients with severe traumatic brain injury, a study showed.
Regionalization of trauma care is a health care strategy that attempts to improve outcomes for trauma patients by setting up a tiered, integrated system that aims to match the injured patient with the appropriate health care facility in a timely fashion. The Northern Ohio Trauma System (NOTS) was created in 2010 to manage trauma patients using the regionalization model.
In this study of outcomes in NOTS patients, longer-term follow-up of 3,496 severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) admissions showed 30-day mortality fell from 21% to 16% after regionalization (24% relative reduction; P value < .0001) and 6-month mortality declined from 24% to 20% (17% relative reduction; P = .004).
Multivariable logistic regression only strengthened the effect of regionalization on the primary outcome, lead study author Dr. Michael Kelly said at the annual scientific assembly of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST).
The odds ratio for 30-day mortality was 0.74, representing a 26% relative mortality reduction, and 0.82 for 6-month mortality, representing an 18% relative reduction.
At last year’s EAST meeting, Dr. Kelly and his colleagues reported that hospital mortality declined from 19% (262/1,359 patients) to 14% (302/2,137) in patients with severe TBI after the creation of the NOTS in 2010.
Despite bucking the current trend of rising mortality in hospitalized TBI patients, particularly those with severe brain injuries, their previous results were criticized by some as incomplete because hospital mortality was used without functional status measures or long-term mortality, he said.
To bridge the knowledge gap, the investigators identified all TBI patients older than 14 years with a Head Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) ≥ 3 from 2008 to 2012 in the NOTS database and matched them to the Ohio death index and the regional TBI rehabilitation database. Overall Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores and FIM score gains were compared in 414 patients who were discharged to the regional TBI rehabilitation unit.
As a general rule of thumb, an overall FIM score of 60 is equivalent to 4 hours of personal care assistance in a nursing facility–type setting, a score of 80 equals 2 hours of personalized care in a nursing facility, more than 80 means the patient is able to receive family care at home, and ≥ 100 means minimal burdens in personal care, said Dr. Kelly of the MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, and Cleveland Clinic.
A gain of 22 points is considered a minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for the overall FIM score. The MCID is 17 points for a FIM motor subscale gain, 3 for a FIM cognitive subscale gain, and has not been established for the FIM social subscale.
Overall FIM scores were similar before and after regionalization of trauma care (RT) at admission (54 vs. 48; P = .2) and at discharge (92 vs. 89; P = .1), he said.
FIM scores were similar in both groups at admission and discharge on the cognitive and social subscale domains, but were significantly lower post RT on the motor subscale at admission (38 vs. 31; P = .02) and discharge (68 vs. 65; P = .03). These differences were not clinically significant, according to Dr. Kelly and senior study author Dr. Jeffrey Claridge, NOTS medical director.
Pre- and post-RT patients had similar overall FIM score gains (37 vs. 36; P = .6), motor subscale gains (both groups 29), and social subscale gains (both groups 1). FIM cognitive subscale gains were significantly lower post RT (6 vs. 5; P = .01), but this difference was also not clinically significant.
Notably, discharges to regional TBI rehabilitation increased from 9% before RT to 14% after RT, Dr. Kelly said. The percentage of patients who were discharged to a skilled nurse facility or long-term care facility remained stable at about 30%, as did the percentage discharged home at about 40%.
“Regionalization improves long-term survival and maintains similar functional outcomes for patients with severe traumatic brain injury,” he concluded.
Discussant Dr. Jeffrey Coughenour of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia said it appears regionalization is working, but added, “While we are saving more lives, what kind of lives are we saving? A question that has ever increasing implications for patients and payers evaluating the care we provide.”
He praised the investigators for using the FIM scale rather than the Glasgow Outcome Scale to try and answer this question, but said more information is needed on whether FIM scores improved in more challenging patients such as those with an AIS score of 4 or 5 or those entering rehabilitation after discharge to a skilled nursing or long-term care facility.
Data were not broken down for these more challenging subsets, Dr. Kelly said. The question of quality of life post regionalization was asked after the first study and that functional status was shown to be maintained in TBI patients in the follow-up study.
“Since no major changes in the hospital-based care or rehabilitation care of these TBI patients occurred, we weren’t surprised to see that functional outcomes did not improve,” he said in an interview. “The regionalization protocols were designed primarily to improve survival.”
During a discussion of the results, audience members questioned whether the investigators could be certain the results could be attributed to regionalization and not improvements in treatment of concurrent injuries or improvements in TBI treatment already underway at the time of policy change.
For the most part, these patients had isolated TBIs and no major changes in personnel or TBI care occurred during the study period, Dr. Kelly said.
Under NOTS, region-wide initiatives included use of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for field triage, a transfer line and transfer protocols, and a research database shared between two large hospital systems comprising the level I MetroHealth Medical Center trauma center, two level II trauma centers, and 12 nontrauma hospitals.
Dr. Kelly, his coauthors, and Dr. Coughenour reported no financial disclosures.
LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. – Regionalized trauma care significantly reduces long-term mortality and maintains similar functional outcomes in patients with severe traumatic brain injury, a study showed.
Regionalization of trauma care is a health care strategy that attempts to improve outcomes for trauma patients by setting up a tiered, integrated system that aims to match the injured patient with the appropriate health care facility in a timely fashion. The Northern Ohio Trauma System (NOTS) was created in 2010 to manage trauma patients using the regionalization model.
In this study of outcomes in NOTS patients, longer-term follow-up of 3,496 severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) admissions showed 30-day mortality fell from 21% to 16% after regionalization (24% relative reduction; P value < .0001) and 6-month mortality declined from 24% to 20% (17% relative reduction; P = .004).
Multivariable logistic regression only strengthened the effect of regionalization on the primary outcome, lead study author Dr. Michael Kelly said at the annual scientific assembly of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST).
The odds ratio for 30-day mortality was 0.74, representing a 26% relative mortality reduction, and 0.82 for 6-month mortality, representing an 18% relative reduction.
At last year’s EAST meeting, Dr. Kelly and his colleagues reported that hospital mortality declined from 19% (262/1,359 patients) to 14% (302/2,137) in patients with severe TBI after the creation of the NOTS in 2010.
Despite bucking the current trend of rising mortality in hospitalized TBI patients, particularly those with severe brain injuries, their previous results were criticized by some as incomplete because hospital mortality was used without functional status measures or long-term mortality, he said.
To bridge the knowledge gap, the investigators identified all TBI patients older than 14 years with a Head Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) ≥ 3 from 2008 to 2012 in the NOTS database and matched them to the Ohio death index and the regional TBI rehabilitation database. Overall Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores and FIM score gains were compared in 414 patients who were discharged to the regional TBI rehabilitation unit.
As a general rule of thumb, an overall FIM score of 60 is equivalent to 4 hours of personal care assistance in a nursing facility–type setting, a score of 80 equals 2 hours of personalized care in a nursing facility, more than 80 means the patient is able to receive family care at home, and ≥ 100 means minimal burdens in personal care, said Dr. Kelly of the MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, and Cleveland Clinic.
A gain of 22 points is considered a minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for the overall FIM score. The MCID is 17 points for a FIM motor subscale gain, 3 for a FIM cognitive subscale gain, and has not been established for the FIM social subscale.
Overall FIM scores were similar before and after regionalization of trauma care (RT) at admission (54 vs. 48; P = .2) and at discharge (92 vs. 89; P = .1), he said.
FIM scores were similar in both groups at admission and discharge on the cognitive and social subscale domains, but were significantly lower post RT on the motor subscale at admission (38 vs. 31; P = .02) and discharge (68 vs. 65; P = .03). These differences were not clinically significant, according to Dr. Kelly and senior study author Dr. Jeffrey Claridge, NOTS medical director.
Pre- and post-RT patients had similar overall FIM score gains (37 vs. 36; P = .6), motor subscale gains (both groups 29), and social subscale gains (both groups 1). FIM cognitive subscale gains were significantly lower post RT (6 vs. 5; P = .01), but this difference was also not clinically significant.
Notably, discharges to regional TBI rehabilitation increased from 9% before RT to 14% after RT, Dr. Kelly said. The percentage of patients who were discharged to a skilled nurse facility or long-term care facility remained stable at about 30%, as did the percentage discharged home at about 40%.
“Regionalization improves long-term survival and maintains similar functional outcomes for patients with severe traumatic brain injury,” he concluded.
Discussant Dr. Jeffrey Coughenour of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia said it appears regionalization is working, but added, “While we are saving more lives, what kind of lives are we saving? A question that has ever increasing implications for patients and payers evaluating the care we provide.”
He praised the investigators for using the FIM scale rather than the Glasgow Outcome Scale to try and answer this question, but said more information is needed on whether FIM scores improved in more challenging patients such as those with an AIS score of 4 or 5 or those entering rehabilitation after discharge to a skilled nursing or long-term care facility.
Data were not broken down for these more challenging subsets, Dr. Kelly said. The question of quality of life post regionalization was asked after the first study and that functional status was shown to be maintained in TBI patients in the follow-up study.
“Since no major changes in the hospital-based care or rehabilitation care of these TBI patients occurred, we weren’t surprised to see that functional outcomes did not improve,” he said in an interview. “The regionalization protocols were designed primarily to improve survival.”
During a discussion of the results, audience members questioned whether the investigators could be certain the results could be attributed to regionalization and not improvements in treatment of concurrent injuries or improvements in TBI treatment already underway at the time of policy change.
For the most part, these patients had isolated TBIs and no major changes in personnel or TBI care occurred during the study period, Dr. Kelly said.
Under NOTS, region-wide initiatives included use of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for field triage, a transfer line and transfer protocols, and a research database shared between two large hospital systems comprising the level I MetroHealth Medical Center trauma center, two level II trauma centers, and 12 nontrauma hospitals.
Dr. Kelly, his coauthors, and Dr. Coughenour reported no financial disclosures.
LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. – Regionalized trauma care significantly reduces long-term mortality and maintains similar functional outcomes in patients with severe traumatic brain injury, a study showed.
Regionalization of trauma care is a health care strategy that attempts to improve outcomes for trauma patients by setting up a tiered, integrated system that aims to match the injured patient with the appropriate health care facility in a timely fashion. The Northern Ohio Trauma System (NOTS) was created in 2010 to manage trauma patients using the regionalization model.
In this study of outcomes in NOTS patients, longer-term follow-up of 3,496 severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) admissions showed 30-day mortality fell from 21% to 16% after regionalization (24% relative reduction; P value < .0001) and 6-month mortality declined from 24% to 20% (17% relative reduction; P = .004).
Multivariable logistic regression only strengthened the effect of regionalization on the primary outcome, lead study author Dr. Michael Kelly said at the annual scientific assembly of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST).
The odds ratio for 30-day mortality was 0.74, representing a 26% relative mortality reduction, and 0.82 for 6-month mortality, representing an 18% relative reduction.
At last year’s EAST meeting, Dr. Kelly and his colleagues reported that hospital mortality declined from 19% (262/1,359 patients) to 14% (302/2,137) in patients with severe TBI after the creation of the NOTS in 2010.
Despite bucking the current trend of rising mortality in hospitalized TBI patients, particularly those with severe brain injuries, their previous results were criticized by some as incomplete because hospital mortality was used without functional status measures or long-term mortality, he said.
To bridge the knowledge gap, the investigators identified all TBI patients older than 14 years with a Head Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) ≥ 3 from 2008 to 2012 in the NOTS database and matched them to the Ohio death index and the regional TBI rehabilitation database. Overall Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores and FIM score gains were compared in 414 patients who were discharged to the regional TBI rehabilitation unit.
As a general rule of thumb, an overall FIM score of 60 is equivalent to 4 hours of personal care assistance in a nursing facility–type setting, a score of 80 equals 2 hours of personalized care in a nursing facility, more than 80 means the patient is able to receive family care at home, and ≥ 100 means minimal burdens in personal care, said Dr. Kelly of the MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, and Cleveland Clinic.
A gain of 22 points is considered a minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for the overall FIM score. The MCID is 17 points for a FIM motor subscale gain, 3 for a FIM cognitive subscale gain, and has not been established for the FIM social subscale.
Overall FIM scores were similar before and after regionalization of trauma care (RT) at admission (54 vs. 48; P = .2) and at discharge (92 vs. 89; P = .1), he said.
FIM scores were similar in both groups at admission and discharge on the cognitive and social subscale domains, but were significantly lower post RT on the motor subscale at admission (38 vs. 31; P = .02) and discharge (68 vs. 65; P = .03). These differences were not clinically significant, according to Dr. Kelly and senior study author Dr. Jeffrey Claridge, NOTS medical director.
Pre- and post-RT patients had similar overall FIM score gains (37 vs. 36; P = .6), motor subscale gains (both groups 29), and social subscale gains (both groups 1). FIM cognitive subscale gains were significantly lower post RT (6 vs. 5; P = .01), but this difference was also not clinically significant.
Notably, discharges to regional TBI rehabilitation increased from 9% before RT to 14% after RT, Dr. Kelly said. The percentage of patients who were discharged to a skilled nurse facility or long-term care facility remained stable at about 30%, as did the percentage discharged home at about 40%.
“Regionalization improves long-term survival and maintains similar functional outcomes for patients with severe traumatic brain injury,” he concluded.
Discussant Dr. Jeffrey Coughenour of the University of Missouri Health System in Columbia said it appears regionalization is working, but added, “While we are saving more lives, what kind of lives are we saving? A question that has ever increasing implications for patients and payers evaluating the care we provide.”
He praised the investigators for using the FIM scale rather than the Glasgow Outcome Scale to try and answer this question, but said more information is needed on whether FIM scores improved in more challenging patients such as those with an AIS score of 4 or 5 or those entering rehabilitation after discharge to a skilled nursing or long-term care facility.
Data were not broken down for these more challenging subsets, Dr. Kelly said. The question of quality of life post regionalization was asked after the first study and that functional status was shown to be maintained in TBI patients in the follow-up study.
“Since no major changes in the hospital-based care or rehabilitation care of these TBI patients occurred, we weren’t surprised to see that functional outcomes did not improve,” he said in an interview. “The regionalization protocols were designed primarily to improve survival.”
During a discussion of the results, audience members questioned whether the investigators could be certain the results could be attributed to regionalization and not improvements in treatment of concurrent injuries or improvements in TBI treatment already underway at the time of policy change.
For the most part, these patients had isolated TBIs and no major changes in personnel or TBI care occurred during the study period, Dr. Kelly said.
Under NOTS, region-wide initiatives included use of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for field triage, a transfer line and transfer protocols, and a research database shared between two large hospital systems comprising the level I MetroHealth Medical Center trauma center, two level II trauma centers, and 12 nontrauma hospitals.
Dr. Kelly, his coauthors, and Dr. Coughenour reported no financial disclosures.
AT THE EAST SCIENTIFIC ASSEMBLY
Key clinical point: Regionalized trauma care reduces long-term mortality and maintains functional outcomes in patients with severe TBI.
Major finding: RT reduced 30-day mortality from 21% to 16% (P < .0001) and 6-month mortality from 24% to 20% (P = .004).
Data source: Analysis of 3,496 patients with severe TBI.
Disclosures: Dr. Kelly, his coauthors, and Dr. Coughenour reported no financial disclosures.