Early major fracture care in polytrauma—priorities in the context of concomitant injuries: A Delphi consensus process and systematic review

Author:

Pfeifer Roman,Klingebiel Felix Karl-Ludwig,Balogh Zsolt J.,Beeres Frank J.P.,Coimbra Raul,Fang Christian,Giannoudis Peter V.,Hietbrink Falco,Hildebrand Frank,Kurihara Hayato,Lustenberger Thomas,Marzi Ingo,Oertel Markus F.,Peralta Ruben,Rajasekaran Shanmuganathan,Schemitsch Emil H.,Vallier Heather A.,Zelle Boris A.,Kalbas Yannik,Pape Hans-Christoph,

Abstract

BACKGROUND The timing of major fracture care in polytrauma patients has a relevant impact on outcomes. Yet, standardized treatment strategies with respect to concomitant injuries are rare. This study aims to provide expert recommendations regarding the timing of major fracture care in the presence of concomitant injuries to the brain, thorax, abdomen, spine/spinal cord, and vasculature, as well as multiple fractures. METHODS This study used the Delphi method supported by a systematic review. The review was conducted in the Medline and EMBASE databases to identify relevant literature on the timing of fracture care for patients with the aforementioned injury patterns. Then, consensus statements were developed by 17 international multidisciplinary experts based on the available evidence. The statements underwent repeated adjustments in online- and in-person meetings and were finally voted on. An agreement of ≥75% was set as the threshold for consensus. The level of evidence of the identified publications was rated using the GRADE approach. RESULTS A total of 12,476 publications were identified, and 73 were included. The majority of publications recommended early surgery (47/73). The threshold for early surgery was set within 24 hours in 45 publications. The expert panel developed 20 consensus statements and consensus >90% was achieved for all, with 15 reaching 100%. These statements define conditions and exceptions for early definitive fracture care in the presence of traumatic brain injury (n = 5), abdominal trauma (n = 4), thoracic trauma (n = 3), multiple extremity fractures (n = 3), spinal (cord) injuries (n = 3), and vascular injuries (n = 2). CONCLUSION A total of 20 statements were developed on the timing of fracture fixation in patients with associated injuries. All statements agree that major fracture care should be initiated within 24 hours of admission and completed within that timeframe unless the clinical status or severe associated issues prevent the patient from going to the operating room. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Delphi-Consensus/Systematic Review; Level IV

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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