Impact of time to surgery on mortality in hypotensive patients with noncompressible torso hemorrhage: An AAST multicenter, prospective study

Juan Duchesne, Kevin Slaughter, Ivan Puente, John D. Berne, Brian Yorkgitis, Jennifer Mull, Jason Sperry, Matthew Tessmer, Todd Costantini, Allison E. Berndtson, Taylor Kai, Giannina Rokvic, Scott Norwood, Katelyn Meadows, Grace Chang, Brittney M. Lemon, Tomas Jacome, Lauren Van Sant, Jasmeet Paul, Zoe MaherAmy J. Goldberg, Robert M. Madayag, Greg Pinson, Mark J. Lieser, James Haan, Gary Marshall, Matthew Carrick, Danielle Tatum

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND Death from noncompressible torso hemorrhage (NCTH) may be preventable with improved prehospital care and shorter in-hospital times to hemorrhage control. We hypothesized that shorter times to surgical intervention for hemorrhage control would decrease mortality in hypotensive patients with NCTH. METHODS This was an AAST-sponsored multicenter, prospective analysis of hypotensive patients aged 15+ years who presented with NCTH from May 2018 to December 2020. Hypotension was defined as an initial systolic blood pressure (SBP) ≤ 90 mm Hg. Primary outcomes of interest were time to surgical intervention and in-hospital mortality. RESULTS There were 242 hypotensive patients, of which 48 died (19.8%). Nonsurvivors had higher mean age (47.3 vs. 38.8; p = 0.02), higher mean New Injury Severity Score (38 vs. 29; p < 0.001), lower admit systolic blood pressure (68 vs. 79 mm Hg; p < 0.01), higher incidence of vascular injury (41.7% vs. 21.1%; p = 0.02), and shorter median (interquartile range, 25-75) time from injury to operating room start (74 minutes [48-98 minutes] vs. 88 minutes [61-128 minutes]; p = 0.03) than did survivors. Multivariable Cox regression showed shorter time from emergency department arrival to operating room start was not associated with improved survival (p = 0.04). CONCLUSION Patients who died arrived to a trauma center in a similar time frame as did survivors but presented in greater physiological distress and had significantly shorter times to surgical hemorrhage intervention than did survivors. This suggests that even expediting a critically ill patient through the current trauma system is not sufficient time to save lives from NCTH. Civilian prehospital advance resuscitative care starting from the patient first contact needs special consideration.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)801-811
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
Volume92
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2022
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • advanced resuscitative care
  • damage-control resuscitation
  • definitive control
  • Noncompressible torso hemorrhage
  • time to hemorrhage control

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