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. 2019 May;86(5):829-837.
doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000002195.

Comorbidities, anticoagulants, and geriatric-specific physiology for the field triage of injured older adults

Affiliations

Comorbidities, anticoagulants, and geriatric-specific physiology for the field triage of injured older adults

Craig D Newgard et al. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2019 May.

Abstract

Background: Comorbid conditions and anticoagulants have been considered as field triage criteria to raise the sensitivity for identifying seriously injured older adults, but research is sparse. We evaluated the utility of comorbidities, anticoagulant use, and geriatric-specific physiologic measures to improve the sensitivity of the field triage guidelines for high-risk older adults in the out-of-hospital setting.

Methods: This was a cohort study of injured adults 65 years or older transported by 44 emergency medical services agencies to 51 trauma and nontrauma hospitals in seven Oregon and Washington counties from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011. Out-of-hospital predictors included current field triage criteria, 13 comorbidities, preinjury anticoagulant use, and previously developed geriatric specific physiologic measures. The primary outcome (high-risk patients) was Injury Severity Score of 16 or greater or need for major nonorthopedic surgical intervention. We used binary recursive partitioning to develop a clinical decision rule with a target sensitivity of 95% or greater.

Results: There were 5,021 older adults, of which 320 (6.4%) had Injury Severity Score of 16 or greater or required major nonorthopedic surgery. Of the 2,639 patients with preinjury medication history available, 400 (15.2%) were taking an anticoagulant. Current field triage practices were 36.6% sensitive (95% confidence interval [CI], 31.2%-42.0%) and 90.1% specific (95% CI, 89.2%-91.0%) for high-risk patients. Recursive partitioning identified (in order): any current field triage criteria, Glasgow Coma Scale score of 14 or less, geriatric-specific vital signs, and comorbidity count of 2 or more. Anticoagulant use was not identified as a predictor variable. The new criteria were 90.3% sensitive (95% CI, 86.8%-93.7%) and 17.0% specific (95% CI, 15.8%-18.1%).

Conclusions: The current field triage guidelines have poor sensitivity for high-risk older adults. Adding comorbidity information and geriatric-specific physiologic measures improved sensitivity, with a decrement in specificity.

Level of evidence: Prognostic/Epidemiologic, level II.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of Interest: No author had conflicts of interest related to this study.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Current use of individual triage criteria by EMS among older adults meeting the field trauma triage guidelines (n = 583). * Triage criteria used by EMS agencies that are not included in the current (2011) national field triage guidelines. † Color scheme for histogram bars follows steps of national Field Triage Decision Scheme: Step 1 criteria (physiologic) = black; Step 2 criteria (anatomic) = dark grey; Step 3 criteria (mechanism) = light grey; Step 4 criteria (special considerations) = white. ‡ Data for individual triage criteria were collected only when EMS marked a criterion as present. To account for varying proportions of missingness, percentages were calculated using a fixed denominator of 583 triage-positive patients. Multiple criteria could be applied to a single patient, so the percentages do not add to 100%.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Derived clinical decision rule aligning the current triage guidelines with geriatric-specific physiology and comorbidity criteria to better identify high-risk injured older adults (n = 5,021).

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