TY - JOUR
T1 - Hospitals with and without neurosurgery
T2 - a comparative study evaluating the outcome of patients with traumatic brain injury
AU - Giugni, Aimone
AU - Gamberini, Lorenzo
AU - Carrara, Greta
AU - Antiga, Luca
AU - Brissy, Obou
AU - Buldini, Virginia
AU - Calamai, Italo
AU - Csomos, Akos
AU - De Luca, Alessandra
AU - Ferri, Enrico
AU - Fleming, Joanne M.
AU - Gradisek, Primoz
AU - Kaps, Rafael
AU - Kyprianou, Theodoros
AU - Lagomarsino, Silvia
AU - Lazar, Isaac
AU - Martino, Costanza
AU - Mikaszewska-Sokolewicz, Malgorzata
AU - Montis, Andrea
AU - Nardai, Gabor
AU - Nattino, Giovanni
AU - Nattino, Giuseppe
AU - Paci, Giulia
AU - Portolani, Laila
AU - Xirouchaki, Nektaria
AU - Chieregato, Arturo
AU - Bertolini, Guido
AU - Ágnes, Sárkány
AU - Agostini, Fulvio
AU - Ajmone-Cat, Claudio
AU - Bassi, Giovanni
AU - Bekos, Vasileios
AU - Bellin, Marzia
AU - Bocci, Maria Grazia
AU - Bonato, Valeria
AU - Bonato, Alfeo
AU - Bonizzoli, Manuela
AU - Bonucci, Paola
AU - Bottazzi, Andrea
AU - Calicchio, Giuseppe
AU - Carlin, Fabrizia
AU - Casagli, Sergio
AU - Castioni, Carlo Alberto
AU - Ciceri, Rita
AU - Cocciolo, Francesco
AU - Crestan, Ezio
AU - Cseplo, Peter
AU - Curto, Francesco
AU - Dąbrowski, Wojciech
AU - Duek, Or
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - Background: We leveraged the data of the international CREACTIVE consortium to investigate whether the outcome of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU) in hospitals without on-site neurosurgical capabilities (no-NSH) would differ had the same patients been admitted to ICUs in hospitals with neurosurgical capabilities (NSH). Methods: The CREACTIVE observational study enrolled more than 8000 patients from 83 ICUs. Adult TBI patients admitted to no-NSH ICUs within 48 h of trauma were propensity-score matched 1:3 with patients admitted to NSH ICUs. The primary outcome was the 6-month extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS-E), while secondary outcomes were ICU and hospital mortality. Results: A total of 232 patients, less than 5% of the eligible cohort, were admitted to no-NSH ICUs. Each of them was matched to 3 NSH patients, leading to a study sample of 928 TBI patients where the no-NSH and NSH groups were well-balanced with respect to all of the variables included into the propensity score. Patients admitted to no-NSH ICUs experienced significantly higher ICU and in-hospital mortality. Compared to the matched NSH ICU admissions, their 6-month GOS-E scores showed a significantly higher prevalence of upper good recovery for cases with mild TBI and low expected mortality risk at admission, along with a progressively higher incidence of poor outcomes with increased TBI severity and mortality risk. Conclusions: In our study, centralization of TBI patients significantly impacted short- and long-term outcomes. For TBI patients admitted to no-NSH centers, our results suggest that the least critically ill can effectively be managed in centers without neurosurgical capabilities. Conversely, the most complex patients would benefit from being treated in high-volume, neuro-oriented ICUs.
AB - Background: We leveraged the data of the international CREACTIVE consortium to investigate whether the outcome of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU) in hospitals without on-site neurosurgical capabilities (no-NSH) would differ had the same patients been admitted to ICUs in hospitals with neurosurgical capabilities (NSH). Methods: The CREACTIVE observational study enrolled more than 8000 patients from 83 ICUs. Adult TBI patients admitted to no-NSH ICUs within 48 h of trauma were propensity-score matched 1:3 with patients admitted to NSH ICUs. The primary outcome was the 6-month extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS-E), while secondary outcomes were ICU and hospital mortality. Results: A total of 232 patients, less than 5% of the eligible cohort, were admitted to no-NSH ICUs. Each of them was matched to 3 NSH patients, leading to a study sample of 928 TBI patients where the no-NSH and NSH groups were well-balanced with respect to all of the variables included into the propensity score. Patients admitted to no-NSH ICUs experienced significantly higher ICU and in-hospital mortality. Compared to the matched NSH ICU admissions, their 6-month GOS-E scores showed a significantly higher prevalence of upper good recovery for cases with mild TBI and low expected mortality risk at admission, along with a progressively higher incidence of poor outcomes with increased TBI severity and mortality risk. Conclusions: In our study, centralization of TBI patients significantly impacted short- and long-term outcomes. For TBI patients admitted to no-NSH centers, our results suggest that the least critically ill can effectively be managed in centers without neurosurgical capabilities. Conversely, the most complex patients would benefit from being treated in high-volume, neuro-oriented ICUs.
KW - Brain injuries
KW - GOS-E
KW - Outcome assessment
KW - Prospective studies
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - Traumatic
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118781407&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s13049-021-00959-2
DO - 10.1186/s13049-021-00959-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 34727955
SN - 1757-7241
VL - 29
JO - Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
JF - Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
IS - 1
M1 - 158
ER -