Practice Patterns Vary Widely in the Care of Pediatric and Adolescent Pelvic and Acetabular Fractures: A CORTICES Survey
- PMID: 39428588
- DOI: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002847
Practice Patterns Vary Widely in the Care of Pediatric and Adolescent Pelvic and Acetabular Fractures: A CORTICES Survey
Abstract
Introduction: Pediatric pelvic and acetabular fractures are rare but potentially devastating injuries and significant management variation exists across the United States. This study sought to elucidate treatment decision-making trends, involvement of adult trauma fellowship-trained surgeons in pediatric care, and pre- and postoperative transfer patterns.
Methods: Pediatric orthopaedic surgeons who serve as trauma liaisons at 20 PTCs were surveyed regarding training, practice volume, and factors contributing to institutional management of pelvic and acetabular injuries. Five clinical scenarios of pelvic ring and acetabular fractures that varied by injury pattern, age, and sex were presented. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the results.
Results: Eighteen institutions responded to the survey (90% response rate, 16 Level, 1 PTC). All surgeons were pediatric fellowship-trained (77.7% in practice >5 y). The four most common factors affecting whether surgeons independently managed both pelvic ring and acetabular fractures were patient age, fracture characteristics, displacement and need for surgery. The majority reported managing <10 acetabular (72.2%) but >10 pelvic ring (77.8%) injuries per year. In the clinical scenarios, patients <10 were more likely to have treatment decisions made by a pediatric orthopaedic surgeon. Older patients were more likely to be transferred to another institution for surgery but were often transferred back to the PTC postoperatively. In all clinical scenarios other than posterior hip dislocation, a trauma fellowship-trained surgeon was more likely to be the operative surgeon, even when the patient was not transferred.
Conclusions: There is substantial variation in the management of pediatric and adolescent pelvic and acetabular fractures. Even at tertiary care PTCs, volumes are low, and trauma fellowship-trained surgeons are often involved in decision-making and operative management. Age and injury pattern seem to play a large role in variation, and patient transfers between facilities are common.
Level of evidence: V.
Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
J.S. is a consultant for OrthoPediatrics. I.S. is a consultant for OrthoPediatrics. W.T. is currently receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Gillette Foundation. The remaining authors declare no conflicts of interest.
References
-
- Kruppa C, Khoriaty J, Sietsema D, et al. Pediatric pelvic ring injuries: how benign are they? Injury. 2016;47:2228–2234.
-
- Holden CP, Holman J, Herman MJ. Pediatric pelvic fractures. J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2007;15:172–177.
-
- Spiguel L, Glynn L, Liu D, et al. Pediatric pelvic fractures: a marker for injury severity. Am Surg. 2006;72:481–484.
-
- Defrancesco CJ, Sankar WN. Traumatic pelvic fractures in children and adolescents. Semin Pediatr Surg. 2017;26:27–35.
-
- Marmor M, Elson J, Mikhail C, et al. Short-term pelvic fracture outcomes in adolescents differ from children and adults in the National Trauma Data Bank. J Child Orthop. 2015;9:65–75.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
