Scoring Tool to Predict Need for Early Video‐Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) After Pediatric Trauma

Author:

Kazempoor Brian1ORCID,Nahmias Jeffry1,Clark Isabel1,Schubl Sebastian1,Lekawa Michael1,Swentek Lourdes1,Keshava Hari B.1,Grigorian Areg12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery University of California Irvine, Orange CA USA

2. Division of Trauma Burns and Surgical Critical Care Department of Surgery University of California Irvine Medical Center 333 The City Blvd West, Suite 1600 92868‐3298 Orange CA USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNo widely used stratification tool exists to predict which pediatric trauma patients may require a video‐assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). We sought to develop a novel VATS‐In‐Pediatrics (VIP) score to predict the need for early VATS (within 72 h of admission) for pediatric trauma patients.MethodsThe pediatric 2017–2020 Trauma Quality Improvement Program database was used and divided into two sets (derivation set using 2017–2019 data and validation set using 2020 data). First, multiple logistic regression models were created to determine the risk of early VATS for patients ≤ 17 years old. Second, the weighted average and relative impact of each independent predictor were used to derive a VIP score. We then validated the score using the area under the receiver operating characteristic (AROC) curve.ResultsFrom 218,628 patients in the derivation set, 2183 (1.0%) underwent early VATS. A total of 8 independent predictors of VATS were identified, and the VIP score was derived with scores ranging from 0 to 9. The AROC for this was 0.91. The VATS rate increased steadily from 12.5 to 32% then 60.5% at scores of 3, 4, and 6, respectively. In the validation set, from 70,316 patients, 887 (1.3%) underwent VATS, and the AROC was 0.91.ConclusionsVIP is a novel and validated scoring tool to predict the need for early VATS in pediatric trauma. This tool can potentially help hospital systems prepare for pediatric patients at high risk for requiring VATS during their first 72 h of admission. Future prospective research is needed to evaluate VIP as a tool that can improve clinical outcomes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Surgery

Reference28 articles.

1. Injury‐related emergency department visits by children and adolescents: United States, 2009–2010;Albert M;NCHS Data Brief,2014

2. A National Analysis of Pediatric Trauma Care Utilization and Outcomes in the United States

3. The lung and pediatric trauma

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