Abstract
The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Committee on Trauma has established a framework for trauma center quality improvement. Despite efforts, recent studies show persistent variation in patient outcomes across national trauma centers. We aimed to investigate whether risk-adjusted mortality varies at the hospital level and if high-performing centers demonstrate better adherence to ACS Verification, Review, and Consultation (VRC) program quality measures. We analyzed data from the 2018-2021 ACS TQIP Participant Use Files, focusing on adult admissions at ACS-verified Level I or II trauma centers for blunt, penetrating, or isolated traumatic brain injury. We used mixed-effects models to assess center-specific risk-adjusted mortality and identified high-performing centers (HPTC), defined as those with the lowest decile of overall risk-adjusted mortality. We compared patient and hospital characteristics, outcomes, and adherence to ACS-VRC quality measures between HPTC and non-HPTC. Over the study period, 1,498,602 patients across 442 Level I and II trauma centers met inclusion criteria: 65.3% presenting with blunt injury, 9.3% with penetrating injury, and 25.4% with isolated TBI. Management at HPTC was associated with lower odds of major complications, failure-to-rescue and takeback. Furthermore, HPTC status was associated with increased odds of adherence to several ACS-VRC quality measures, including balanced resuscitation (Odds Ratio [OR] 1.40, 95%Confidence Interval [CI] 1.29-1.51), appropriate pediatric admissions (OR 1.88, 95%CI 1.07-3.68), and substance abuse screening (AOR 1.14, 95%CI 1.12-1.16). Significant variation in risk-adjusted mortality persists across trauma centers. Given the association between adherence to quality measures and high-performance, multidisciplinary efforts to refine and implement guidelines are warranted.
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