Feasibility of conducting a military-relevant multicenter cohort study to assess outcomes of early trauma resuscitative interventions in a prolonged care civilian setting

Author:

Mould-Millman Nee-Kofi,Dixon Julia M.,Lategan Hendrick J.,Beaty Brenda,Fosdick Bailey,Fleischer Chelsie,de Vries Shaheem,Schauer Steven G.,Steyn Elmin,Verster Janette,Hodsdon Lesley,Mukonkole Suzan,Doubell Karlien,Stassen Willem,Keenan Sean,Cunningham Cord,Moore Ernest E.,Ginde Adit A.,Bebarta Vikhyat S.

Abstract

BACKGROUND The Epidemiology and Outcomes of Prolonged Trauma Care (EpiC) study is a 4-year, prospective, observational, large-scale epidemiologic study in South Africa. It will provide novel evidence on how early resuscitation impacts postinjury mortality and morbidity in patients experiencing prolonged care. A pilot study was performed to inform the main EpiC study. We assess outcomes and experiences from the pilot to evaluate overall feasibility of conducting the main EpiC study. METHODS The pilot was a prospective, multicenter, cohort study at four ambulance bases, four hospitals, and two mortuaries from March 25 to August 27, 2021. Trauma patients 18 years or older were included. Data were manually collected via chart review and abstraction from clinical records at all research sites and inputted into Research Electronic Data Capture. Feasibility metrics calculated were as follows: screening efficiency, adequate enrollment, availability of key exposure and outcome data, and availability of injury event date/time. RESULTS A total of 2,303 patients were screened. Of the 981 included, 70% were male, and the median age was 31.4 years. Six percent had one or more trauma relevant comorbidity. Fifty-five percent arrived by ambulance. Forty percent had penetrating injuries. Fifty-three percent were critically injured. Thirty-three percent had one or more critical interventions performed. Mortality was 5%. Four of the eight feasibility metrics exceed the predetermined threshold: screening ratio, monthly enrollment, percentage with significant organ failure, and missing injury date/time for emergency medical services patients. Two feasibility metrics were borderline: key exposure and primary outcome. Two feasibility metrics fell below the feasibility threshold, which necessitate changes to the main EpiC study: percentage with infections and missing injury date/time for walk-in patients. CONCLUSION The EpiC pilot study suggests that the main EpiC study is overall feasible. Improved data collection for infections and methods for missing data will be developed for the main study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level V.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Surgery

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