• Am J Emerg Med · May 2024

    Interventions associated with survival after prehospital intubation in the deployed combat setting.

    • Michael D April, Rachel E Bridwell, William T Davis, Joshua J Oliver, Brit Long, Andrew D Fisher, Adit A Ginde, and Steven G Schauer.
    • Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, USA; 14th Field Hospital, Fort Stewart, GA, USA. Electronic address: michael.d.april@post.harvard.edu.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2024 May 1; 79: 798479-84.

    IntroductionAirway compromise is the second leading cause of potentially preventable death on the battlefield. Prehospital airway management is often unavoidable in a kinetic combat environment and expected to increase in future wars where timely evacuation will be unreliable and air superiority not guaranteed. We compared characteristics of survivors to non-survivors among combat casualties undergoing prehospital airway intubation.Materials And MethodsWe requested all Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DODTR) encounters during 2007-2023 with documentation of any airway intervention or assessment within the first 72-h after injury. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of all casualties with intubation documented in the prehospital setting. We used descriptive and inferential statistical analysis to compare survivors through 7 days post injury versus non-survivors. We constructed 3 multivariable logistic regression models to test for associations between interventions and 7-day survival after adjusting for injury severity score, mechanism of injury, and receipt of sedatives, paralytics, and blood products.ResultsThere were 1377 of 48,301 patients with documentation of prehospital intubation in a combat setting. Of these, 1028 (75%) survived through 7 days post injury. Higher proportions of survivors received ketamine, paralytic agents, parenteral opioids, and parenteral benzodiazepines; there was no difference in the proportions of survivors versus non-survivors receiving etomidate. The multivariable models consistently demonstrated positive associations between 7-day survival and receipt of non-depolarizing paralytics and opioid analgesics.ConclusionsWe found an association between non-depolarizing paralytic and opioid receipt with 7-day survival among patients undergoing prehospital intubation. The literature would benefit from future multi-center randomized controlled trials to establish optimal pharmacologic strategies for trauma patients undergoing prehospital intubation.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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