Temperature Derangement on Admission is Associated With Mortality in Burn Patients—A Nationwide Analysis and Opportunity for Improvement

Author:

Stanton Eloise1ORCID,Gillenwater Justin1ORCID,Pham Tam N2,Sheckter Clifford C34

Affiliation:

1. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Southern California , Los Angeles , USA

2. Department of Surgery, University of Washington , Seattle , USA

3. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Stanford University , Palo Alto , USA

4. Northern California Regional Burn Center, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center , Palo Alto , USA

Abstract

Abstract Although single-institution studies have described the relationship between hypothermia, burn severity, and complications, there are no national estimates on how temperature on admission impacts hospital mortality. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between admission temperature and complications on a national scale to expose opportunities for improved outcomes. The US National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) was analyzed between 2007 and 2018. Mortality was modeled using multivariable logistic regression including burn severity variables (% total burn surface area (TBSA), inhalation injury, emergency department (ED) temperature), demographics, and facility variables. Temperature was parsed into three categories: hypothermia (<36.0°C), euthermia (36.0–37.9°C), and hyperthermia (≥38.0°C). A total of 116,796 burn encounters were included of which 77.9% were euthermic, 20.6% were hypothermic and 1.45% were hyperthermic on admission. For every 1.0C drop in body temperature from 36.0°C, mortality increased by 5%. Both hypothermia and hyperthermia were independently associated with increased odds of mortality when controlling for age, gender, inhalation injury, number of comorbidities, and %TBSA burned (p < .001). All temperatures below 36.0°C were significantly associated with increased odds of mortality. Patients with ED temperatures between 32.5 and 33.5°C had the highest odds of mortality (22.0, 95% CI 15.6–31.0, p < .001). ED hypothermia and hyperthermia are independently associated with mortality even when controlling for known covariates associated with inpatient death. These findings underscore the importance of early warming interventions both at the prehospital stage and upon ED arrival. ED temperature could become a quality metric in benchmarking burn centers to improve mortality.

Funder

Center for Translation Science Advancement

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

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