Abstract

This study aimed to characterise the most common injury profiles and interventions in older major trauma patients, and how they change with age. This is a retrospective review of interventions, injury profiles and outcomes of major trauma patients aged 65years and older from 2007 to 2018, using data from the Victorian State Trauma Registry. A latent class analysis (LCA) was used to identify homogenous injury groups. The LCA identified five injury profiles: isolated head injury; chest/upper limb injuries; multi-trauma; isolated spine; and head/chest/upper limb. Among 10,001 patients, 50% had an isolated head injury, and 83% of patients received definitive treatment at a major trauma centre. 50% of patients received a surgical or non-surgical intervention, and 36% underwent surgery. These proportions declined with increasing age. Older patients with major trauma are a heterogeneous group, whose mechanisms and patterns of injury, and clinical management change with increasing age.

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