Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The Princess Alexandra Hospital (PAH) Department of Neurosurgery services a population of 1.85 million people over a 420,000 km2 area in Queensland, Australia. Increased distance from a neurosurgical centre has previously been correlated with poorer outcomes in traumatic brain injury. METHODS: This single-centre retrospective study identified patients aged 16-85 who underwent evacuation of an acute traumatic subdural (ASDH) or extradural haemorrhage (EDH) between 2016 and 2022. Initial Glasgow Coma Score (GCS), pupillary abnormalities, time to intervention, distance from PAH and the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS-E) at 6 months were recorded. RESULTS: 106 and 50 patients underwent evacuation of ASDH and EDH respectively. In the ASDH group, age was inversely correlated (p = 0.03, r2 = 0.04) and the motor component of the initial GCS was directly correlated (p = 0.002, r2 = 0.09) with GOS-E at 6 months. Distance from PAH directly correlated with an increased time to intervention (p<0.0001, r2 = 0.23) but did not correlate with GOS-E at 6 months (p = 0.09). There was no difference between survivors and non-survivors regarding distance from PAH (43.43 ± 75.05 km vs. 25.56 ± 41.32 km, p = 0.15) or time to operation (276.14 ± 192.77 mins vs. 217.40 ± 147.27 mins, p = 0.08). This was also found for survivors with poor (GOS-E <6) and fair (GOS-E = 6) recovery at 6 months. In the EDH group there was no correlation between distance, time to operative intervention, age or initial motor score with outcomes at 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Whilst increased distance from treatment centre correlated with increased time to surgical intervention for ASDH, it did not impact on survival or functional outcomes at 6 months. For ASDH requiring urgent evacuation, increasing age and severity of primary brain injury are predictors of poorer long-term outcomes.

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