Abstract
AimFactors affecting mortality during the first year following high-energy pelvic fractures has not been reported previously. Nor has surgical complications leading to reoperations been reported in a cohort with only high-energy pelvic trauma patients.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to report and analyse factors affecting outcome, in terms of mortality and reoperations, up to 1 year after the injury in patients with a traumatic pelvic ring injury due to a high-energy trauma.Materials and methodsData from the SweTrau (Swedish National Trauma Registry) on patients admitted to the Trauma Centre Karolinska in Stockholm, Sweden, were collected. Inclusion criteria were adults (age ≥ 18), trauma with a high-energy mechanism, alive on arrival, Swedish personal identification number, reported pelvic fracture on CT scan. Patient records and radiographies were reviewed. The study period was 2011–2015 with 1-year follow-up time. Univariate and regression analysis on factors affecting mortality was performed. Risk of reoperation was analysed using univariate and case-by-case analysis.ResultsWe included 385 cases with mean age 47.5 ± 20.6 years (38% females): 317 pelvic fractures, 48 acetabular fractures and 20 combined injuries. Thirty-day mortality was 8% (30/385), and 1-year mortality was 9% (36/385). The main cause of death at 1 year was traumatic brain injury (14/36) followed by high age (> 70) with extensive comorbidities (8/36). Intentional fall from high altitude (OR 6, CI 2–17), GCS < 8 (OR 12, CI 5–33) and age > 70 (OR 17, CI 6–51) were factors predicting mortality. Thirty patients (22%, 30/134) were further reoperated due to hardware-related (n = 18) or non-hardware-related complications (n = 12). Hardware-related complications included: mal-placed screws (n = 7), mal-placed plate (n = 1), implant failure (n = 6), or mechanical irritation from the implant (n = 4). Non-hardware-related reasons for reoperations were: infection (n = 10), skin necrosis (n = 1), or THR due to post-traumatic osteoarthritis (n = 1).ConclusionNon-survivors in our study died mainly because of traumatic brain injury or high age with extensive comorbidities. Most of the mortalities occurred early. Intentional injuries and especially intentional falls from high altitude had high mortality rate. Reoperation frequency was high, and several of the hardware-related complications could potentially have been avoided.
Highlights
Traumatic pelvic ring injury (TPRI) is a collection name for pelvic and acetabular fractures
TPRIs have historically been considered serious injuries resulting in a mortality rate of 7–47% in poly-trauma patients [1, 6,7,8,9,10,11]
European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology (2018) 28:1273–1282 with or without bleeding, can significantly affect the mortality rather than solely bleeding caused by the pelvic fracture [12, 13]. Not all of these injuries are caused by non-intentional accidents, but some are caused by intentional acts by the patients, a fact that is rarely discussed or analysed in the existing literature
Summary
Traumatic pelvic ring injury (TPRI) is a collection name for pelvic and acetabular fractures. European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology (2018) 28:1273–1282 with or without bleeding, can significantly affect the mortality rather than solely bleeding caused by the pelvic fracture [12, 13] Not all of these injuries are caused by non-intentional accidents, but some are caused by intentional acts by the patients, a fact that is rarely discussed or analysed in the existing literature. Later follow-ups are more difficult to perform, and mortality between 30 days and 1 year has not been reported as an outcome in high-energy poly-trauma patients previously. There are only a few reports on overall risks for reoperations without in detail description following pelvic or acetabular fracture surgery in an unselected population of high-energy trauma patients [22, 23]
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