Individual risk factors predictive of major trauma in pre-hospital injured older patients: a systematic review

Author:

Pandor Abdullah1,Fuller Gordon2,Essat Munira3,Sabir Lisa4,Holt Chris5,Buckley Woods Helen5,Chatha Hridesh5

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sheffield ORCID iD:, URL: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2552-5260

2. The University of Sheffield ORCID iD:, URL: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8532-3500

3. The University of Sheffield ORCID iD:, URL: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2397-402X

4. The University of Sheffield ORCID iD:, URL: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6488-3314

5. The University of Sheffield

Abstract

Background: Older adults with major trauma are frequently under-triaged, increasing the risk of preventable morbidity and mortality. The aim of this systematic review was to identify which individual risk factors and predictors are likely to increase the risk of major trauma in elderly patients presenting to emergency medical services (EMS) following injury, to inform future elderly triage tool development.Methods: Several electronic databases (including Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL and the Cochrane Library) were searched from inception to February 2021. Prospective or retrospective diagnostic studies were eligible if they examined a prognostic factor (often termed predictor or risk factor) for, or diagnostic test to identify, major trauma. Selection of studies, data extraction and risk of bias assessments using the Quality in Prognostic Studies (QUIPS) tool were undertaken independently by at least two reviewers. Narrative synthesis was used to summarise the findings.Results: Nine studies, all performed in US trauma networks, met review inclusion criteria. Vital signs (Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score, systolic blood pressure, respiratory rate and shock index with specific elderly cut-off points), EMS provider judgement, comorbidities and certain crash scene variables (other occupants injured, occupant not independently mobile and head-on collision) were identified as significant pre-hospital variables associated with major trauma in the elderly in multi-variable analyses. Heart rate and anticoagulant were not significant predictors. Included studies were at moderate or high risk of bias, with applicability concerns secondary to selected study populations.Conclusions: Existing pre-hospital major trauma triage tools could be optimised for elderly patients by including elderly-specific physiology thresholds. Future work should focus on more relevant reference standards and further evaluation of novel elderly relevant triage tool variables and thresholds.

Publisher

Class Publishing

Subject

General Engineering

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