A Meta-Analysis of the Mortality and the Prevalence of Burn Complications in Western Populations

Author:

Foppiani Jose A1,Weidman Allan1,Hernandez Alvarez Angelica1ORCID,Valentine Lauren1ORCID,Bustos Valeria P1ORCID,Galinaud Cécilia2ORCID,Hrdina Radim3ORCID,Hrdina Radim2ORCID,Musil Zdenek4ORCID,Lee Bernard T1ORCID,Lin Samuel J1

Affiliation:

1. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, , Boston, MA 02215 , USA

2. Faculty of Science, Department of Organic Chemistry, Charles University , Praha, 12108 , Czech Republic

3. Faculty of Chemical Technology, University of Pardubice , Pardubice, 53210 , Czech Republic

4. Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Biology and Medical Genetics, Charles University , Praha, 12800 , Czech Republic

Abstract

Abstract Management of burn injuries is complex, with highly variable outcomes occurring among different populations. This meta-analysis aims to assess the outcomes of burn therapy in North American and European adults, specifically mortality and complications, to guide further therapeutic advances. A systematic review of PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane was performed. Random-effect meta-analysis of proportions was conducted to assess the overall prevalence of the defined outcomes. In total, 54 studies were included, pooling 60 269 adult patients. A total of 53 896 patients were in North America (NA, 89.4%), and 6373 were in Europe (10.6%). Both populations experienced similar outcomes. The overall pooled prevalence of mortality was 13% (95% CI, 8%-19%) for moderate burns, 20% (95% CI, 12%-29%) for severe burns in the NA region, and 22% (95% CI, 16%-28%) for severe burns in Europe. Infectious complications were the most common across both regions. European studies showed an infection rate for patients with moderate and severe burns at 8% and 76%, respectively, while NA studies had rates of 35% and 54%. Acute kidney injury (39% vs 37%) and shock (29% vs 35%) were the next most common complications in European and NA studies, respectively. The length of stay was 27.52 days for patients with severe burns in Europe and 31.02 days for patients with severe burns in NA. Burn outcomes are similar between Western populations. While outcomes are reasonably good overall, infectious complications remain high. These findings encourage the development of further therapeutic strategies disclosing respective costs to enable cost/efficiency evaluations in burn management.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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