• Am J Emerg Med · May 2024

    Outcomes by time-to-OR for penetrating abdominal trauma patients.

    • Braylee Grisel, Alexander Gordee, Maragatha Kuchibhatla, Zachary Ginsberg, Suresh Agarwal, and Krista Haines.
    • Division of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA. Electronic address: braylee.grisel@duke.edu.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2024 May 1; 79: 144151144-151.

    IntroductionTime-To-OR is a critical process measure for trauma performance. However, this measure has not consistently demonstrated improvement in outcome.Study DesignUsing TQIP, we identified facilities by 75th percentile time-to-OR to categorize slow, average, and fast hospitals. Using a GEE model, we calculated odds of mortality for all penetrating abdominal trauma patients, firearm injuries only, and patients with major complication by facility speed. We additionally estimated odds of mortality at the patient level.ResultsOdds of mortality for patients at slow facilities was 1.095; 95% CI: 0.746, 1.608; p = 0.64 compared to average. Fast facility OR = 0.941; 95% CI: 0.780, 1.133; p = 0.52. At the patient-level each additional minute of time-to-OR was associated with 1.5% decreased odds of in-hospital mortality (OR 0.985; 95% CI:0.981, 0.989; p < 0.001). For firearm-only patients, facility speed was not associated with odds of in-hospital mortality (p-value = 0.61). Person-level time-to-OR was associated with 1.8% decreased odds of in-hospital mortality (OR 0.982; 95% CI: 0.977, 0.987; p < 0.001) with each additional minute of time-to-OR. Similarly, failure-to-rescue analysis showed no difference in in-hospital mortality at the patient level (p = 0.62) and 0.4% decreased odds of in-hospital mortality with each additional minute of time-to-OR at the patient level (OR 0.996; 95% CI: 0.993, 0.999; p = 0.004).ConclusionDespite the use of time-to-OR as a metric of trauma performance, there is little evidence for improvement in mortality or complication rate with improved time-to-OR at the facility or patient level. Performance metrics for trauma should be developed that more appropriately approximate patient outcome.Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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